Showing posts with label Un lieu/Une vie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Un lieu/Une vie. Show all posts

Friday, August 7

farmer and style at Design Huis (6 august - 27 september)





The current financial crisis and our concerns about ecology have contributed to rethinking our existence in the challenging and stressful city, while advances in information technology have participated in setting humans free from a fixed location within the urban environment. Man can now live wherever he wants and however he wants at any given moment.

We therefore can live like nomads and gather like shepherds: news, knowledge, music, images, objects and food. The slow food movement has shifted the focus from the exotic and exclusive to a need for the local and the seasonal. Forgotten vegetables and regional recipes are rediscovered and reinvented. Now this movement is spreading to other domains within our lives and “slowing down” becomes a general and accepted idea.

Everything seems to indicate that rural realities are influencing urban life. The greening of the city and the urbanization of the country will ultimately lead to the blurring of borders between these two domains. Designers, artists and architects are reflecting upon this exchange of ideas. The life of man and animal will be strongly integrated and the production of food will take place within the city borders. In a search for autarchy, a more mature and autonomous positioning is requested concerning the chain of food production. New ideas will be born to seed, hybrid and harvest within the city.

Materials will be given by the land and animals and will be treated with respect; they will carry the honest identity of the fibre and the flock and transform the designer into a conceptual farmer. Several internationally renowned designers already choose to live on farms today.

Form is derived from the romantic pastoral past and seeks the essence of the farm in new materials and images. The land and earth is studied, mapped and researched and is used to formulate simple and generic tabletop products made from a colourcard of clay from the polder. The wheelbarrow and the rocking chair are reinvented. The tile stove and pick fork are back. In a first trial to understand and map this movement, through fifteen installations, Eindhoven’s
Designhuis will explore a new lifestyle where humans are seen as an integral part of the ecologic cycle, integrated in the process. Placing themselves on equal ground with agriculture and animal. Humans with respect for life.


About the exhibition

the exhibition farmer and style, from the 6th of august till the 27th of september, sketches how globalization, a growing world population and the search for sustainable lifestyles leads to concepts like vertical farming. as farming slowly makes it’s entry into the city, however in a modernized way, farmers specialize themselves in urban life. design plays a crucial role in this new interpretation. li edelkoort (former chairwoman of design academy eindhoven) will curate this exhibition. she has already invited a number of important designers, architects, artists and brands to collaborate with us. some of the participants are for example piet heijn eek, wiel arets, Mike Meire, Esther Kokmeijer, Claudy Jongstra, Jurgen Bey and Rianne Makkink, Koen van Mechelen, Frank Tjepkema, Christien Meindertsma, MVRDV, Nadine Sterk, Lonny van Rijswijck, Maarten Kolk, Studio Job, Scholten en Baijngs, Floris Schoonderbeek, Dick van Hoff, Joep van Lieshout, Joons Kim, Ton Matton, Kranen/Gille, Frederik Molenschot, Jessica Hansson, Revital Cohen, Agata Jaworska, Rosanne van de Weerdt, Sander Bokkinga, David Olschewski.

During the exhibition the audience can enjoy organic/regional products at the café and every Friday there will be a market with organic products on the square. The banks of the river will change into an organic vegetable garden for the surroundings. During the exhibition different activities, like rural movie nights, documentaries and presentations in which the farm represents innovation and education, will be developed. There will also be two lectures from an architect and a designer who are passionate about the subject.

Main image: Atelier NL, Maarten Kolk
Image: Christien Meindertsma
Image: Ton Matton
Image: Koen van Mechelen

Monday, August 3

Ceci n'est pas un burger joint





Daniel Boulud does Burgers

PHOTOGRAPHS BY BILL MILNE
DBGB
299 Bowery
Tel: 212-460-5777
Designer: Thomas Schlesser/Design Bureaux

House in Saijo by Suppose Design Office



Architects: Suppose Design Office
Location: Saijo,Higashihiroshima,Hiroshima,Japan
Program: Personal house
Site area: 246 sqm
Building area: 50.41m
Total floor area: 115.51 sqm
Photographs: Toshiyuki Yano from Nacasa&Partners Inc.





via archdaily

Monday, June 8

Amaison by Concrete



In developing Amaison, Maison van den Boer’s new delicatessen, Concrete went back to the company’s origins, in which the emphasis was on the fundamentals of food.

Concrete took a literal interpretation of the essence of Maison van de Boer: being at home in Grandma’s kitchen, preparing traditional meals of watching as they are made, tasting them and taking them home.




Friday, June 5

Panta Rhei school by i29 Interior Architects























The new interiors of the Panta Rhei school in Amstelveen designed by i29 Interior Architects are literally covered in poems that express themes of adolescence such as friendship, insecurity and dreams.

Wednesday, April 29

Restaurants Clandestins a Paris

La tendance tres anglo-saxonne du diner clandestin a enfin atteind Paris. Le concept est simple reunir des inconnus, dans votre appartemnt et leur faire partager un diner de fins gourmets.


A l'hidden kitchen, Braden Perkins et Laurel Adrian vous acceuillent dans leur appartement et vous propose un menu de 10 plats concocte par leur soins.

Au Lunch in the loft, vous apprenez a dejeuner autrement dans Paris avec Cabri (aka Miss Lunch)


Hidden Kitchen
Le site
Réservations : hkreservations@gmail.com
Prix du dîner : 80€ par personne.


peasandcarrots

zucchini


plating


Saturday, April 11

Evolution of Office Spaces Reflects Changing Attitudes Toward Work

By Cliff Kuang

Since the dawn of the white-collar age, office designs have cycled through competing demands: openness versus privacy, interaction versus autonomy. Here's a brief history of how seating arrangements have reflected our changing attitudes toward work.

Illustration: Harry Campbell

1Taylorism (ca. 1904)

American engineer Frederick Taylor was obsessed with efficiency and oversight and is credited as one of the first people to actually design an office space. Taylor crowded workers together in a completely open environment while bosses looked on from private offices, much like on a factory floor.

2 Bürolandschaft (ca. 1960)

The German "office landscape" brought the socialist values of 1950s Europe to the workplace: Management was no longer cosseted in executive suites. Local arrangements might vary by function—side-by-side workstations for clerks or pinwheel arrangements for designers, to make chatting easier—but the layout stayed undivided.

3 Action Office (1968)

Bürolandschaft inspired Herman Miller to create a product based on the new European workplace philosophy. Action was the first modular business furniture system, with low dividers and flexible work surfaces. It's still in production today and widely used. In fact, you probably know Action by its generic, more sinister name: cubicle.

4 Cube Farm (ca. 1980)

It's the cubicle concept taken to the extreme. As the ranks of middle managers swelled, a new class of employee was created: too important for a mere desk but too junior for a window seat. Facilities managers accommodated them in the cheapest way possible, with modular walls. The sea of cubicles was born.

Virtual Office (ca. 1994)

Ad agency TBWA\Chiat\Day's LA headquarters was a Frank Gehry masterpiece. But the interior, dreamed up by the company's CEO, was a fiasco. The virtual office had no personal desks; you grabbed a laptop in the morning and scrambled to claim a seat. Productivity nose-dived, and the firm quickly became a laughingstock.

5 Networking (present)

During the past decade, furniture designers have tried to part the sea of cubicles and encourage sociability—without going nuts. Knoll, for example, created systems with movable, semi-enclosed pods and connected desks whose shape separates work areas in lieu of dividers. Most recently, Vitra unveiled furniture in which privacy is suggested if not realized. Its large tables have low dividers that cordon off personal space but won't guard personal calls.


via Wired

Wednesday, April 8

DISTRITO CAPITAL in Mexico










Left: CONFERENCE CENTER / photo © Adrien Dirand, courtesy of DISTRITO CAPITAL

Right: ENTRANCE MIRRORS / photo © Adrien Dirand, courtesy of DISTRITO CAPITAL














CORNER SUITE / photo © Adrien Dirand, courtesy of DISTRITO CAPITAL

















Left: BAR / photo © Adrien Dirand, courtesy of DISTRITO CAPITAL

Right: AMENITIES / photo © Adrien Dirand, courtesy of DISTRITO CAPITAL















TERRACE / photo © Adrien Dirand, courtesy of DISTRITO CAPITAL



























ROYAL SUITE / photo © Adrien Dirand, courtesy of DISTRITO CAPITAL















ROYAL SUITE / photo © Adrien Dirand, courtesy of DISTRITO CAPITAL















ROYAL SUITE / photo © Adrien Dirand, courtesy of DISTRITO CAPITAL














ROYAL SUITE / photo © Adrien Dirand, courtesy of DISTRITO CAPITAL

















LOBBY / photo © Adrien Dirand, courtesy of DISTRITO CAPITAL









Left: LIBRARY / photo © Adrien Dirand, courtesy of DISTRITO CAPITAL

Right: LOBBY / photo © Adrien Dirand, courtesy of DISTRITO CAPITAL

















Left: RECEPTION / photo © Adrien Dirand, courtesy of DISTRITO CAPITAL

Right: LIBRARY / photo © Adrien Dirand, courtesy of DISTRITO CAPITAL





















ROYAL SUITE / photo © Adrien Dirand, courtesy of DISTRITO CAPITAL