Get paid To Promote at any Location
Get paid To Promote at any Location

Kamis, 31 Desember 2009

The Art Institute's Modern Wing beckons Chicago design tourists

Cassie Walker -- Interior Design

Joseph Rosa sidles up to the security guard standing next to Patricia Urquiola's felt-flowered Antibodi chaise longue. "No one has touched anything, have they?" he asks in a voice that sounds parental, not just curatorial. Who can blame him? The curator of architecture and design at the Art Institute of Chicago, Rosa worked with Renzo Piano Building Workshop to fashion this corner of the Modern Wing into galleries for his department. At 8,000 square feet, the space is the largest of its kind in the world. Every inch has been carefully considered. So if a tourist touches the Urquiola chaise, it's more than a gaffe—it's a personal insult.

I've met Rosa for a tour. Even on a rainy day, light pours into the entrance of the Modern Wing—along with umbrella-toting visitors. As Piano partner Joost Moolhuijzen would explain to me afterward, "It really is about how you embrace the city and make the museum welcoming to the people who have never set foot in it." He says that the greatest challenge was to balance the desire for a light-flooded space with the sun-averse preservation of art. The solution was what he calls a "flying carpet," a series of angled aluminum blades running across the roof's skylights to protect the galleries from direct sun. Today, of course, that's not a problem. I dry out as Rosa and I walk toward the galleries. "At MoMA, they tell me, when you change design objects, it's actually in a public corridor. Here, you have an identified zone that's lockable." A good thing, since he plans on changing exhibitions twice a year.

Out of the 250,000 pieces Rosa had to choose from, dating back about a century, we look at some of his earliest selections: a preliminary model of the nearby Inland Steel Building by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, plans for Australia's Newman College, circa 1915, by Marion Mahony and Walter Burley Griffin. But most visitors don't linger too long in the past. After a quick glance, they follow the siren call of the sound track to Ordos 100, Lot 006, Inner Mongolia, China, a digital video that illustrates how an imaginary family would live in a house by the architecture firm MOS. The crowd then drifts loosely toward Being Not Truthful Always Works Against Me, graphic designers Stefan Sagmeister and Ralph Ammer's kinetic image of a spiderweb that distorts and twists according to the promptings of a motion sensor. Rosa gives some serious consideration to two children playing in front of the piece. "We'll probably leave this one up," he says.

One of Rosa's responsibilities is to show how the relationship between architecture and design has evolved. I ask what criteria should be used to evaluate Xefirotarch's model for Sur, a summer pavilion built for the P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center in Long Island City, New York. Or what about Hella Jongerius tableware? After some careful thought, he answers, "I think the general public sometimes feels, I don't know enough about this to comment. But do you like it? Does it strike a chord in you? That's how knowledge grows." Rosa plans to push the conversation forward with temporary commissions from designers such as Florencia Pita of Mod and SCI-Arc, whom he calls "an inventive thinker, to say the least." Looking for acquisitions, he says, requires seeking out new issues and aesthetics.

We walk toward the final gallery, home to an impressive selection of contemporary chairs including Ron Arad's Rover, made from a car seat, and the red wire tangles of Fernando and Humberto Campana's Corallo. On one side of the room, an angular LED sculpture by Yves Behar gently pulsates. Donated by Behar himself, it's uncannily reminiscent of another recent addition to the city: UNStudio's temporary pavilion across the street in Millennium Park, which I had walked through on the way to the museum.

Rosa was a key player in the commission of that pavilion as well as one by Zaha Hadid Architects, so I ask about them over lunch at Terzo Piano, the restaurant on the third floor of the new wing. The two firms are "building from the past into the future," Rosa says. On the phone from Amsterdam, UNStudio principal Ben van Berkel describes his design as partly an ode to Daniel Burnham, whose master plan for Chicago is celebrating its 100th birthday. "Within the vision of the Burnham plan, there was this idea of diagonal vistas," Van Berkel explains. "Now you look up and see towers rising on the lake shore, rising in a diagonal manner." The cantilevered roof of the pavilion, he adds, could be interpreted as a riff on Frank Lloyd Wright's Robie House in nearby Hyde Park, yet the pavilion's lighting—which he designed to glow with more intensity as more people walk past—adds a futuristic twist. "If there's no communication between the public and the architecture you make," Van Berkel says, "I think you aren't really making architecture."

With that axiom in mind, I look around the restaurant, an 8,500-square-foot space by Dirk Denison Architects. Everything is flexible, from the floating credenza and banquette at the entry to the rolling painted aluminum-and-steel dividers that allow the dining room to be quickly changed into any number of configurations for private entertaining. The restaurant is specifically meant "to feel like it's in a museum," Dirk Denison says. Hence the Piano-inspired white palette and the vitrines displaying contemporary representational ceramics. Curvy chairs by George Nelson "bring sensuousness to a space that is otherwise very rational," Denison explains.

What a fitting description for the entire experience, I think—until I revisit the galleries a week later. Behar's LED piece still glows and, behind it, window shades rise to let in softly filtered afternoon sun. "What an un—Art Institute—looking room," one visitor remarks. "That's the idea," his companion replies. If Rosa were here, his parental sternness would surely transform into paternal pride.

Rabu, 30 Desember 2009

FTF Design Studio - Rack


The simple act of carrying a pile of firewood in his arms gave designer West Chin the idea for Rack, a sleek U-shaped container that can cradle objects such as logs, towels, or magazines. Crafted from white Corian, it comes in four sizes starting at 14 inches wide.

In the Shadow of Versailles

France's most celebrated château has a new neighbor, the renovated Ecole des Beaux-Arts by Platane Architecte

Seth Sherwood -- Interior Design

Talk about a French paradox. For decades, half of the Ecole des Beaux-Arts de Versailles—a prestigious school of fine arts, founded in the late 18th century near the famous château—languished in a charmless 1950's concrete annex at complete odds with the lovely things created inside it. Worse, small windows sealed off the building from the outer world, undercutting the school's philosophy of total openness to students of every background, to the local community, and to arts of every variety. "It was very, very ugly," architect Platane Beres says with a chuckle. "It had utterly no character."

A complete redo of the two-story, 5,000-square-foot structure proved to entail a series of delicate balancing acts for Platane Architecte. The city of Versailles, which runs the school, envisioned transforming the boring front of the building—south-facing and sun-baked—into something monumental that would engage the public and admit more light. The new facade would also have to make sense in the context of Versailles's grand baroque architecture. At the same time, however, Beres needed to keep students' and teachers' needs in mind. That meant screening harsh direct sunlight and shielding ground-floor studios from distracting pedestrians. One potentially attractive solution, a glass curtain wall, was therefore out.

Then Beres had his eureka moment: "We have to use stone!" In this case, what he calls the "noblest of all building materials" is a sand-colored limestone that allowed him to pay homage to the many stone edifices of Versailles. His design, however, resolutely avoids mimicking them or quoting styles from the 18th and 19th centuries. No dandified flourishes. No throwback frills. Instead, his rhythmic facade is composed of six tall stone panels that alternate with six tall windows. It's both monumental enough to valorize a venerable institution and restrained enough not to overpower the quaint, villagelike surroundings.

Beres didn't stop there. Knowing that the scheme would admit too much light, he installed a floating stone panel just a couple of feet in front of each of the six windows. Because the panels' dimensions match those of the windows almost exactly, the powerful southern sun is prevented from assaulting the interiors head-on, but its rays seep around the edges of the stone, creating indirect light. The configuration also keeps the school cool in summer while reducing noise from the cobblestone street.

While the stone slabs between the windows are the regular, flat variety, Beres used a CNC milling machine to carve seemingly random protrusions from the slabs that compose the floating panels. These smooth bumps, he says, make the surface "strange, weird, like a planet or a human body. They have a very sensual aspect. People want to touch them." The sculptural forms, he continues, allude to the sculpting and other arts going on inside. Pedestrians are seduced into further contact with the structure by the brief diagonal glimpses of the school's interior caught between the panels and the windows. "You can't quite see the things going on inside, and you wonder what they are. Your curiosity is aroused. But you don't bother the students," he explains.

The school's north-facing rear facade, which looks out on a private courtyard, is the polar opposite of the front one: no direct sunlight, no street life. Beres played up the contrast, knocking down the concrete wall and replacing it with virtually unbroken glass. There's no stone in sight. Yet not content with a common curtain wall, he added angles to his: The surface looks as if it were constructed from a gigantic sheet of clear origami paper. Whereas the front of the school is opaque, tactile, and muscular, the back is transparent, hands-off, and delicate.

Classrooms and studios, meanwhile, evoke blank canvases. Beres ripped up the old industrial floor tiles to reveal smooth concrete, which he painted a pure white. Walls and ceilings got the same paint job. The only major concession to color and furniture is a pair of vast red rectangular shelving units that slide along tracks in the floor of the hangarlike multipurpose studio on the ground level. The movable units double as walls, allowing teachers and students to manipulate the atelier's size and layout.

Especially striking is the diffuse, balanced, cool white light that fills the interior. For Beres, this effect—achieved by the contrasting north and south facades—creates the ideal environment for making and displaying art. "It's as if you're floating in light, enveloped by light. Any object that you put in the room, even yourself, your body, becomes a figure highlighted against a white canvas," he says. The artist becomes the artwork, a beautiful French paradox par excellence.

Selasa, 29 Desember 2009

Vilagrasa - Ash


For those increasingly rare public spaces with no smoking ban in effect, Ash cigarette receptacles are truly smoldering—made of steel painted matte black and trimmed with polished stainless steel. Select one of two sizes: 47¼ inches tall by 11 2/3 wide by 4 deep and 44½ inches tall by 15 wide by 9½ deep.

Big Man on Campus

Nicholas Tamarin -- Interior Design


When Thomas Heatherwick won a competition to design the Aberystwyth Arts Centre at Aberystwyth University in Wales, he was reluctant to dilute the rural character of the site with a single monolithic building. Instead, he built eight small ones nestled among the pine, oak, and birch trees. Seven of the eight 850-square-foot structures contain two identical studios; the eighth one is a single.

The school provides the studios free of charge to artists-in-residence or rents to small creative start-ups and local artists. "One of my reasons for renting was because of the light in the studios. It's so beautiful," says painter Mary Lloyd Jones, who works on her abstract canvases there.

Heatherwick's master touch was to use a futuristic stainless steel just .005 inch thick, about the same as a Coke can. Sourced that thin, the material was less expensive, but unfortunately it was neither rigid nor insulated. To firm it up, Heatherwick Studio passed the sheets between two wooden rollers in a contraption akin to a Victorian mangle, the type of clothespress common back when Aberystwyth was founded in 1872.

The machine gave the ultrathin stainless a crinkled appearance reminiscent of the foil walls of Andy Warhol's New York studio, the Factory. The designers then sprayed a CFC-free rigid polyurethane foam on the back of the metal for insulation. Resulting panels are not only affordable, solid, and well insulated but also accommodating of the timber-framed structures' eaves, windowsills, and other details. In addition, the nonuniform surface reflects jumbled glimpses of the surrounding forest and the sky.

"As the young trees and grass begin to mature, the units will feel further embedded in the environment," Heatherwick says. "We're like architectural tailors, building simple forms with an extraordinary skin."

This isn't his first go-round with metal manipulation. He used 55 tons of hot-rolled steel for a Longchamp boutique in New York and wrapped a boiler house at Guy's Hospital, London, in woven stainless. It's not likely to be his last either. His upcoming show at London's Haunch of Venison gallery includes five aluminum benches produced by the world's largest extrusion machine.

Senin, 28 Desember 2009

Humanscale - V3


The V3 wall station provides a space saving, ergonomic solution to accommodate multiple computer users in health-care environments. The wall-mounted, track-based unit supports a computer monitor, keyboard, and CPU. Because the system is on a vertical track, it can be positioned to adjust to most users easily, whether they prefer standing or sitting. The track extends up to 70 inches high.

AIS Lends Extreme Makeover: Home Edition a Helping Hand

The office furniture manufacturer's donation including 24 workstations, three private offices, four teacher stations, a conference table, 43 desk chairs, and 80 storage units, is valued at over $275,000.

AIS ABC Extreme Makeover Home Edition The Fishing School


In its second partnership with the ABC television network's Emmy Award-winning reality television series Extreme Makeover: Home Edition, Affordable Interior Systems has donated office furniture to the newly rebuilt The Fishing School in Washington, D.C.

The youth development organization for children ages six to 13 was rebuilt by IA Interior Architects as part of the hit show's upcoming seventh season. For their part, AIS donated 24 workstations, three private office set-ups, four teacher stations, a conference table, 43 desk chairs, and 80 storage units, valued at over $275,000, and installation services for three floors of the school by Maryland Office Interiors.

AIS ABC Extreme Makeover Home Edition The Fishing School

AIS had previously furnished over 20 office spaces in the rebuilding of the Keiki O Ka Aina Family Learning Center in Honolulu, Hawaii for the fifth season premiere of EMHE. AIS exceeded its previous donation for The Fishing School project, which represents the show's largest build to date. The show is set to air sometime in November.

Nicholas Tamarin -- Interior Design


Minggu, 27 Desember 2009

Desu Design - Taru


The white serving platter is arguably the little black dress of the kitchen—an on-call basic of which one can't have enough versions. But the Taru platter, with its striking interplay of lines, angular forms, and textural geometry, bursts out of the standard mold. Crafted of a non-porous high performance resin, the durable platter is 11 inches square.

Child's Play

With an arts center for little Parisians, Matali Crasset makes effervescence effortless

Raul Barreneche -- Interior Design

From 1873 until the 1990's, a cluster of redbrick buildings in gritty Montmartre was the epicenter of death in Paris. Today, the municipal mortuary, renovated by Atelier Novembre, is among Europe's biggest artists-in-residence complexes, christened 104 Cent Quatre after its location at 104 Rue d'Aubervilliers. Studios and workshops for hundreds of painters, sculptors, musicians, and dancers as well as industrial designers now occupy former coffin-making shops, stables for horse-drawn funeral carriages, and garages for later hearses. Art openings and hip-hop parties bring plenty of life to lofty skylit halls once devoted to the departed.

The action is no longer adults-only with the addition of the Maison des Petits, or House of the Little Ones. Established for children of both the center's creative denizens and the residents of one of the city's poorest and most ethnically diverse arrondissements, this isn't a day-care center. Parents or babysitters must accompany the under-6 clientele. Originators conceived of a welcome center where children learn by playing together in the Montessori style, with an eye toward discovery. Young and old alike are exposed to the creative process as mothers and fathers socialize on the sidelines, and new moms are encouraged to come in for nothing more than to change diapers and talk to fellow grown-ups. Resident artists and designers have an open invitation to create toys and games, though there is no formal programming.

Filled with the sounds of children playing and adults chatting, the 1,500-square-foot space is the work of Matali Crasset Productions. Known for whimsical, colorful interiors and furniture as well as her signature Joan of Arc bowl cut, the prolific Matali Crasset envisioned the Maison des Petits as a surrealist garden with organic forms flourishing inside a hard-edged perimeter: a glass storefront system in front, original steel-framed industrial windows in back, and white built-ins along the sides. Upper cabinet doors swing sideways to reveal cubbies. Underneath, identical-looking doors angle downward to become padded seats, perches for adults keeping an eye on children. On top of the built-ins, acoustical panels with rows of lozenge-shape cutouts create a "shell of possibilities," Crasset says. She organized the space within according to children's ages, rendering different zones in distinct bold colors.

Pea green is for the youngest visitors. In the middle of the floor, they enjoy what she calls the "navel," its soft, sunken center ringed by a low-to-the-ground plastic-laminate surface. Infants crawl around inside, supervised by adults sitting on squishy green ottomans. When the playpen is not in use, four wedges clad in matching green laminate fill in the center to create a large round table.

Blue comes in three shades. Above the "navel" hangs a circular canopy constructed by stretching midnight-blue fabric over the spokes of a frame, umbrellalike. The same fabric wraps the tops of four sky-blue "activity mushrooms," as Crasset calls them. Surrounding the infant zone, they indeed look like enchanted toadstools from a cartoon fairy tale, and children aged roughly 2 to 6 use the shelves around these freestanding finned structures to play games, make crafts, or finger-paint. A turquoise archway near the entrance of the Maison suggests the outline of an actual house. Inside the ghosted structure is a make-believe kitchen where the children can pretend to cook. "They respond immediately to objects that have imaginary potential," Crasset says.

A working kitchen is wrapped in bright orange walls. Crasset chose similar lively shades for padding on a bench and the fold-down seats and for plastic stools that resemble jolly orange gas cans, complete with handles. The stools store not fuel, however, but books and art supplies.

These stools line the lower end of a worktable with a yellow top that zigzags down from 28 to 15 inches in height—children and adults always get equal billing at the Maison des Petits. Right outside the standard restroom, there's even a pair of pint-size potties.

Sabtu, 26 Desember 2009

Caroline Swift - Glass Baubles

Through two decades in fashion, including a stint as head knitwear designer at Benetton, Caroline Swift shuttled around the globe, sketchbook in hand. Then she had an epiphany. Disillusioned with the pressures of the garment business, she moved to South Asia and volunteered teaching English. After returning to her native U.K., she channeled her creativity into baking cakes. She began making her own plates for photo shoots when she found herself struggling to find exactly what she needed. Suddenly, Swift was in the midst of Career Number Four.
Focused on delicate china and nature imagery, her signature line quickly grew beyond tabletop to include accessories. Glass Baubles, a string of three dangling 5½-inch-wide vessels, are handblown in Italy in Mandarin, lime green, pale rose, or black-amethyst. Stoneware Flowers, handcrafted in the U.K., are one-of-a-kind natural-colored or charcoal-gray blooms 3½ inches across, including removable centers. Black or white Porcelain Hanging Flowers, ranging from 1 to 3 inches in diameter, come 30 to a string. And white Porcelain Leaves, paper-thin at approximately 2 by 3 inches, are sold in strings of 40.

Applied Science

Edie Cohen -- Interior Design

Restoration Hardware 's polished-nickel pendant fixtures; photo by Art Gray.

The Lab Gastropub on the University of Southern California campus represents big news for two Los Angeles institutions. One is USC itself, which is moving away from cafeteria-style dining halls, toward venues that look like they belong in the private sector. The other is AC Martin, a 103-year-old architecture firm with a nascent interiors division that's now completed three food-service commissions from the university.


Slate-topped teak communal tables and teak benches, all custom by Lily Jack. Chemistry formulas on a blackboard set into beveled subway tile from the Tileshop. Photos by Art Gray.

Attracting students, professors, and downtown residents alike, the "laboratory" theme was conceived by Christopher King, director of interior architecture, with Joanne Camacho, senior graphic designer, and it informs every bit of the 2,200-square-foot interior. Remember blackboards from Biology 101? Here, slate tops the five communal tables. How about the chemistry formulas memorized during midnight cram sessions? The one for caffeine has a special place, inside the rims of coffee cups. King hit local shops for test tubes, beakers, and science books, used as accessories. And a black-and-white image of an old-fashioned microscope, enlarged to 10 feet high, is printed on wall covering. Take a closer look.

Jumat, 25 Desember 2009

Thomas Paul - Curiosities

Vintage prints of plants, birds, and insects, along with displays at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, inspired the latest pillow collection, Curiosities.Each cushion displays large birds or botanicals on the front, with a more graphic array of insects or eggs on the back. They come in two sizes: 12 inches by 20 inches and 22 inches square.

Doing Good and Doing Well

"Pro bono" means getting more than you give

Craig Kellogg -- Interior Design

A computer rendering of a kitchen in a two-family duplex that William McDonough + Partners has designed for the Make It Right Foundation New Orleans; courtesy of William McDonough + Partners.

Brad Pitt would seem to be a patron with money to burn. After Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans, Pitt phoned a number of architects he admired and asked for help with prototype houses for displaced Ninth Ward residents. There was a catch, though—no one would earn a cent. Cradle to Cradle eco evangelist William McDonough, who advised Pitt on ground rules for his Make It Right Foundation New Orleans, cited the often-overlooked component of the profession's mandate for sustainability: the "social sustainability" of giving back.

William McDonough + Partners is now completing plans for a Make It Right duplex. Being "associated with doing good things" is important to the firm, communications director Kira Gould says. She adds that McDonough viewed the duplex as a chance to explore modularity and to work on a residential scale in a long-ignored community. "Does it hurt," she jokes, "when Brad Pitt is on Larry King Live, talking about Make It Right?"


A computer rendering of a kitchen in a two-family duplex that William McDonough + Partners has designed for the Make It Right Foundation New Orleans. Heat-treated lumber pilings that supply flood protection; courtesy of William McDonough + Partners.

The opportunity to give back obviously has extra appeal in a difficult economy, with many projects indefinitely on hold. "Designers are looking to put their passion into something worthwhile," HLW managing principal Chari Jalali says. It was Jalali who ultimately authorized a $15,000 donation of architectural services to turn a Los Angeles warehouse into a depot for Trash for Teaching, which brings recycled materials into children's art classes.

Some of those items, such as paper rolls and ballpoint-pen caps, actually became creative construction materials for the project, which represents both the paid and the unpaid efforts of HLW. Consultants and contractors that the firm patronizes also chipped in for a total of $150,000 in donated construction costs, Jalali estimates. "We caught everybody at an opportune time, because they were slow," she notes.


SPG Architects's health clinic for the Kageno foundation in the Rwandan village of Banda; courtesy of SRG Architects.

The economy was no better in New York when the AIA chapter invited such nonprofits as the U.S. Green Building Council and Architecture for Tibet to solicit volunteers at a free lunch. An unprecedented 250 hungry design professionals showed up for the sandwiches and camaraderie. A job-seeking graduate, Sophia Vincent, credits the event with introducing her to Engineers Without Borders, which asked her to volunteer on a library for a Kenyan village. The project cost just $7,400. To save money, lava-stone blocks were quarried nearby, and locals baked the bricks.

SPG Architects is doing pro bono work in Rwanda. A veteran of 30 shop interiors for Polo Ralph Lauren, partner Eric Gartner encountered a little resistance to the Ralph-esque earth tones he'd planned to paint a health clinic for Kageno, a foundation supported by Donna Karan and Meryl Streep. "When the images came back showing a kind of canary yellow, we were moderately shocked," he admits.


Gluckman Mayner Architects's New York public-school library, funded by the Robin Hood Foundation and featured in a book to be published in 2010 to benefit the San Francisco nonprofit Public Architecture; photo by Peter Mauss/Esto.

The clinic is part of an SPG master plan for a small village of buildings, from classrooms to ecotourism bungalows with composting toilets. As the job ballooned to 36,000 square feet, Gartner found it hard to say no. "How could we really tell them that enough was enough?" he asks. Fortunately, the effort remained recession-friendly for SPG, as four staffers committed to working late, unpaid.

Because Fougeron Architecture is a small firm, Anne Fougeron sometimes gives a quarter of the hours on a project as a gift in lieu of pure pro bono. She sees her work on Planned Parenthood clinics in California as a political statement as well as a good deed. In the spirit of openness, the renovations incorporate panels that are, where possible, transparent. She often finds herself advocating for materials that may be more costly to buy but will look fresh longer, since funds for maintenance can be scarce, especially now.


The MacArthur Health Center in Oakland, California, one of more than a dozen Planned Parenthood clinics that Fougeron Architecture has redesigned; courtesy of Grey Crawford. A Branchelier, which Michelle Workman Design adapted for the Los Angeles bedroom of a lupus patient; courtesy of Denice Duff.

Her friend John Cary, executive director of the San Francisco nonprofit Public Architecture, asks firms to donate a minimum of 20 hours per year to deserving clients, and the organization's 600 affiliates are likely to give $25 million in services in 2009, up from $20 million last year. But that's not the end of the story. "We have no qualms about presenting this as a business opportunity, because it can certainly lead to paying work," Cary says. He adds that Public Architecture projects are typically a manageable 3,000 to 5,000 square feet.

Pro bono projects can of course be even smaller. Michelle Workman Design decorated a Los Angeles bedroom for a young woman with lupus. Michelle Workman clearly relishes her role in the healing process, but she also made sure to have fun within the $5,000 budget. That translated into white silk taffeta curtains with black banding and a bed with a tall headboard upholstered in white linen with black welting. For chandeliers, she came up with a less expensive version of her own Branchelier, which she sells in her store, Red House Interiors.


Passive cooling diagrammed for an Engineers Without Borders library in Usalama, a Kenyan village between Nairobi and the Indian Ocean. The exterior's lava-stone blocks, quarried nearby, and bricks, baked by the locals; courtesy of Engineers Without Borders, New York chapter.

Elaine Griffin Interior Design's namesake principal, whose Design Rules: The Insider's Guide to Becoming Your Own Decorator is coming out in November, has spearheaded 11 glammed-up pro bono renovations in partnership with Oprah Winfrey. "Oprah always says that beautiful things lift you up and nurture you," Elaine Griffin notes. Fortunately, she found her own generosity mirrored by large donations of labor, materials, and furnishings, albeit not her usual custom upholstery, Pratesi sheets, and French antiques.

Tears came to her eyes when female ex-cons at a halfway house in Bridgeport, Connecticut, or cancer patients at the Gilda's Club New York City support facility marveled at faux flokatis or sank into squishy sofas. Paying clients don't always express that kind of gratitude.


Kamis, 24 Desember 2009

Heath Ceramics - Single Stem


Double vision! The double-glazed Single Stem vase collection pairs vibrant hues with minimalist design. A clay base coat is topped by a satiny second glaze that is then scraped off and fired, creating a frosty contrast. The limited-edition run is available in three colorways: Marigold Frost, Heather Frost, and Hibiscus Frost, and each measures 4 inches wide by 6¾ inches tall.

Studying different subjects, New York University students and faculty share a Greenwich Village facility

Gender and sexuality studies. Latino studies. American studies. Each sounds like an embattled militia in some academic guerilla war. However, those fields and several more peacefully coexist in New York University's Department of Social and Cultural Analysis, and Lewis.Tsurumaki.Lewis managed to accommodate all that diversity in a single 16,000-square-foot loft in Greenwich Village. The key was the original ceiling, of which the previous tenant had left only "a few moments" exposed, Marc Tsurumaki says. Handsome in a utilitarian way, the barrel-vaulted concrete could conceptually tie together the disparate fields of study. "Maybe the metaphor is cheap," he continues, "but the idea is 'under one big roof.'"

Tsurumaki had completed NYU's Office of Strategic Assessment, Planning, and Design two years earlier, so he was familiar with the university's commitment to sensible, economical design. After he gutted the 12-foot-high volume intended for the Department of Social and Cultural Analysis, the faculty committee began the design process by asking for as many private offices as would fit were the perimeter completely lined with them. Instead of blocking all the windows like that, Tsurumaki countered with a 25 percent reduction of offices. His successful campaign resulted in a layout that reserved critical square footage for naturally lit communal zones and corridors "as wide as we could get away with," he says.

Bamboo plywood hugs the surfaces of the department's reception desk, while bamboo clads reception's floor and built-in seating. Overhead, Tsurumaki suspended prefab bamboo-plywood ceiling panels that were custom-perforated using a CAD file, then installed with the help of a map, since no two perforation patterns are exactly alike. A similar canopy appears in the grad lounge, where students from various fields can grab a book from open shelves, hang out on benches, post ephemera on a strip of bulletin board, and, in the process, generally cross-pollinate.

The largest gathering place is a multipurpose zone divided from the rest of the space by sliding panels of translucent resin. Flooring here is random-width cork strips in a range of natural colors. Unfortunately, coordinating cork stools were ultimately returned to the manufacturer. "They exfoliated on people," Tsurumaki explains. (Custom replacements are currently awaiting university approval.) The cork stripes wrap up to surface stepped seating for gathering or lounging and also extend beyond the multipurpose zone to clad the torqued corridor wall that runs nearly the entire length of the space from front to back. Along the way, slim boxes of clear acrylic protrude from the wall to display their contents, a single book apiece—the latest scholarship by department faculty. Finally, at the far end, doorways cut out of the wall reveal tidy technology carrels, places for students to dock their laptops.

Enlivening what associate Clark Manning calls "potentially banal office corridors," similar through-the-wall acrylic boxes hold a book or two. These "visible bookcases," as LTL terms them, keep students abreast of what their professors are reading behind closed doors. Meanwhile, additional boxes contain sheets of letter-size white paper simply printed with the occupant's name, an efficient solution in a highly mobile department. Tsurumaki refers to the boxes as a way to "introduce a sense of connection without direct visual access, through a symbolic projection of the professors' identity." Seen from the hall, the boxes add a colorful accent. "In a project like this, you have to find a way to animate a lot of surfaces," he says. Still, he explains, he was careful to avoid a profusion of acrylic colors that "might have read as a superficial illustration of difference." After much debate—"NYU purple was thrown around for a while, but we just couldn't bring ourselves to choose it"—he picked a soothing, lightly frosted sea blue.

Straightforward, flat graphics transform to function in three dimensions. In conference and meeting rooms, vinyl appliqué on windows morphs into protruding acrylic lettering on the walls. "These professors are not your tweed-jacket-wearing crowd, and the graphics add a playful quality," Tsurumaki says. As for restroom signage, the word toilet was chosen for its perceived neutrality, in comparison with more common euphemisms, and emblazoned on the wall in 2-foot-tall vinyl letters. But municipal planning officials nixed the idea, now common in local restaurants, of abandoning single-sex restrooms in favor of private toilet compartments sharing unisex sinks. Perhaps this will merit a chapter in the book that an NYU professor and a doctoral candidate are editing on the history of the public restroom.

Rabu, 23 Desember 2009

Arregui - Office storage

In Spain these serve as mailboxes; but we want to see these cheerful little numbers used for personal office storage. Equipped with flip-down lids and made of steel, the cubbies have an easy-to-clean, painted surface that resists scratches in six preppy patterns. Each measures 13 inches high, 14¾ inches long, and 4 inches deep. No office? No problem.

Farrow & Ball - Lotus Papers


A lotus flower design drawn from a 19th-century French archive brings drama to a new block-printed wallpaper collection. Lotus Papers offers surprising versatility in two pattern sizes—20½ inches or 10 1/8 inches—each in 30 colorways from subtle neutrals to chic urban grays to contemporary acidic shades.

Selasa, 22 Desember 2009

Gandia Blasco - Bluma

Swimming with the fishes takes on a whole new meaning with the Bluma bedding collection. Inspired by underwater vistas, surreal swirls of blue and turquoise envelop you for a deep-sea slumber. The 200-thread-count cotton set is also available in ivory, and comes sized for twin-, full-, queen-, or king-sized beds.

Cirqa Wallcovering - Nouveau Medallion


Art Nouveau-inspired tulips are rendered subtly via low-contrast color treatment in Nouveau Medallion. Seven elegant, tone-on-tone shades include Cornsilk, Lacquer Red, Caviar, and White Shadow. The 20-ounce, Type II vinyl wall covering with Osnaburg fabric backing measures 52 to 54 inches wide.

Senin, 21 Desember 2009

Miele - S7

Keep a low profile with the stealthy S7 series. The upright vacuum cleaners corner as if they're on rails, maneuvering from vertical to horizontal to handle all those dirty deeds. Not only is there power steering, but the energy-saving Automatic setting detects and adjusts appropriately to all surfaces, including drapes, carpeting, hard floors, and cushions. Although the wonder machine touts a life span of 20 years, the virgin polymers make it easily recyclable when its time comes. The S7280 is available in melon yellow, mango red, and lotus white; the S7580 in deep black, garnet red metallic, and steel blue metallic.

Genevieve Bennett - Stucco


As its name suggests, Stucco resembles molding sculpted on a plaster wall, but it is actually a cleverly designed, three-dimensional wall panel adorned with cut leather pieces. The resulting composition of abstracted leaves and flowers comes just in time for spring. While custom colors and sizes are available, it comes standard in a 30 1/3-inch-by-39 1/3-inch panel.

Minggu, 20 Desember 2009

Sferra Bros - Cord, Stripes, Zig Zag, Matchsticks, Eclipse

She may already be a household name in luxury hospitality, but she continues to broaden her reach. In addition to a whopping 10 hotel-residential projects in the works, Kelly Wearstler is introducing a line of bedding manufactured by Sferra Bros., a 118-year-old company that supplies 400-thread pima cotton sateen sheets to chic boutique properties and grandes dames alike. (If you're staying at either 60 Thompson in New York or the Fairmont San Francisco, you're sleeping on Sferra.)

The designer's debut effort for the company is a line of bedding, Kelly Wearstler for Sferra. Her penchant for subtle metallics comes through with the embroidered patterns on the five natural-linen decorative pillows. Sheets are silky white-on-white cotton sateen jacquard with multicolored embroidery. Throw in three quilts, and any hotel room can seem as personal as home.

Weitzner Limited - Eclipse

Lori Weitzner is prone to pondering nature as it relates to the passage of time. Like a time-lapse Discovery Channel documentary, Eclipse, from her Moon Shadow woven wall covering collection, ruminates in ten colors on lunar cycles, wind-blown dunes, ice floes, cresting ocean waves, and sinuous canyons carved over millennia by wind and water.

Sabtu, 19 Desember 2009

Blaue Blume - Dessert Stand


Naughty meets nice with designer Tina Tsang's cheeky and delicious Blaue Blume dessert stand. Where the central stem would be are, instead, a sexy pair of alluring gams wearing gold, white, or frisky-red kitten heels. Provocative curves and a doll head add to the mischief. But the playful details are anchored in intricate porcelain lace casting, a nod to traditional English design. Choose from a pure-white or pale-cream base.

Versa Wallcovering - Corrugae

Corrugated cardboard and metal seem unlikely sources of inspiration, but those are exactly the cues used to create the deeply textured Corrugae. Made with Second-Look Recycled Technology, Corrugae comes in 21 colors and is made of 20-ounce, Type II vinyl with water-based inks and adhesives. It measures 52 to 54 inches wide. Through Second-Look, it contributes to LEED certification and can be reclaimed and recycled.

Jumat, 18 Desember 2009

Modern Fan Company - Velo


The words "sleek and sexy" might not have applied to ceiling fans before, but designer Ron Rezek has changed that with this breath of fresh air. The Velo's powerful motor and maintenance-free bearings reduce noise, while its three aerodynamic blades move air effortlessly. And, with an optional integrated light kit for halogens or compact fluorescents, it's no one-trick pony. The refined, 6½-inch-diameter body of die-cast aluminum and 50-inch-long blades come in either nickel or white finishes.

Innovations in Wallcoverings - Monaco, Monte Carlo, St. Tropez

European craftsmanship creates the look of finely woven metal from a blend of rayon and polyester in the company's Textile Wallcovering collection. Monaco features embossed vertical ridges; Monte Carlo is a damask; and St. Tropez gives the illusion of finely woven metals. All come in four hues.

Kamis, 17 Desember 2009

BlissHome - Wall Mirror

A certain theatrical resident gave Warwickshire, England, its "Shakespeare's County" sobriquet. But it's also home to BlissHome, the manufacturer and distributor of upbeat essentials for kitchen, bath, and beyond. The company has signed on London-based designer Bodo Sperlein to fashion its own first line. Using tones to winning effect, bisques, whites, and organic shapes dominate Sperlein's ceramic and porcelain bathroom collection. The sculptural Wall Mirror, 13¼ inches high and 10 inches wide, swoops down to include a ledge, handy for stowing dental floss, tweezers, or a petite bud vase. The Soap Dish, 6 by 4¾ inches, and Storage Tray are rendered in identical elliptical forms. Modern conveniences take a bow in the pyramidal Electric Toothbrush Head Holder, 3 inches long and high, while a stainless steel pump tops the footed 8-inch-tall Soap Dispenser. The Toilet Brush and holder, 17¾ inches high by 5 wide, are so seamlessly combined, they look like one sinuous vase. A 3¾-inch-diameter essential-oil burner, a lidded Storage Jar, and a pair of Tumblers round out the nine-item medley.

Seabrook Wallcoverings - Fern & Allium Silhouette


Great gardens are designed based on the sun's changing position throughout the day. Fern & Allium Silhouette illustrates the subtle interplay of light and shadow, using dark and light to imply movement and dimension. It is one of 12 designs in eight colorways in the Shadow Play collection.

Rabu, 16 Desember 2009

Isi - Maschile


Imperfection is perfection for Venetian designer Rosaria Rattin's handcrafted Maschile porcelain tableware. Inspired by prêt-à-porter, the collection's plates and bowls bear different graphic patterns. Yet each piece is meant to mix and match, dressing your table in an ensemble of stripes, dots, and organic shapes

Fromental - Origami


Infused with sculptural appeal, Origami is a paper-backed silk wall covering that is painted and embroidered by hand. This elegant made-to-order design combines subtle repeats of delicate trompe l'oeil origami "folds" with artfully stitched silk-on-silk texture in five colorways, including Kozo.

Selasa, 15 Desember 2009

Set a Beautiful Table for The Holidays: Fresh Decorating Ideas


With the Holidays coming up, we’re sure most of you are looking for ideas on how to make the best of these upcoming special days. We would like to be a part of your quest and try to help you. We hope that we will transform your job of preparing and arranging a Christmas table into a fun and pleasant one. This is why we would like to start by giving you a few tips and also show we some table decorating ideas we ran across ourselves.In the pictures below you have some example of Christmas centrepieces, place cards decorations and overall table arrangements. The centrepieces can be either made out of flowers, candles, fruits, Christmas toys or whatever combination of holiday items strikes you. Consider the place cards as a pretext for you to unleash your creativity. There are no limits to how they can look. Make them personal (you can even write something interesting for each person at the table, like a warm private message), funny or simply write out the guests names if the table happens to be an important and serious event. Even though there is plenty of time left ’till Christmas, we wish you a fun decorating time! – pictures via 1, 2, 3, 4, Flikr

Phillip Jeffries - Glam Grass

Phillip Jeffries - Glam Grass

Hand-woven texture takes on a fashionable shimmer in the Glam Grass collection. From a subtle sparkle achieved by weaving metal filaments into hemp, to an incandescent glow created by laminating the woven hemp onto a metallic backing, this collection's 22 choices allow you to select the perfect degree of luminosity.

Senin, 14 Desember 2009

mOdus hotel, Varna, Bulgaria - Large apartment

mOdus hotel, Varna, Bulgaria - Large apartment

mOdus hotel, Varna, Bulgaria - Middle apartment

mOdus hotel, Varna, Bulgaria - Middle apartment

Multifunctional Wall Mount Tv Stand from Fimar




The Creative Side System TV looks like a typical modern flat panel display wall mounted unit, but it hides a keen extra feature which further optimizes space. The inside reveals a decent storage cabinet for discs, cables and plugs which could give a cluttered look to your stylish interiors. The sleek and neat design only enhances the functionally aesthetic appeal of your living room. This idea is great for small spaces because this black tv stand can replace a new cabinet. More information about this black and white living room set and the functional wall mount tv stand you could find on Fimar site.

York Wallpapers & Fabrics - Rosato

Rosato is a large, quatrefoil-shaped damask with an intense "wow" factor, offered in seven colorways including a high-contrast flocked version. It is part of the Design Works Plaza Collection, which includes 16 patterns and coordinating textures, some featuring glass beads, sand, or flocked fibers on 20-ounce, Type II non-woven vinyl substrate.