Light control
Spotwelders is a video-editing facility, primarily working on music videos and advertising. Video-editing is an arduous and intense process. designing room with good light control and acoustics achieving unity and good working space . We also discovered that video-editing is a process requiring a large amount of space for lounging. Clients come to the facility and remain for days on end, occasionally going in and out of the editing suites to check on progress and make decisions. There’s always some kind of seating arrangement at every door and the side walls contain about 42 window which are 12-foot wide. We really like the couches.
Add comment February 1, 2008
FReedom 08

FReedom is a live free event kicking off on feb in Toronto , celebrating black history with, good music and design.
Add comment January 28, 2008
Molo design for space

Molo studio captures space with a distinctive flexible honeycomb structure to fan open into stools, benches and lounges. The geometry of the honeycomb structure allows for a modest amount of paper to take on surprisingly impressive strength.
paper soft seating structure is not intended to be disposable, or thought of for short term use – the paper in fact, gets better with age, as the surface texture of the paper edges softens with use over time into a pleasing natural patina. As the paper stools and lounges are used, the edges of the paper gently soften and crush, creating irregular facets that catch the light and form a unique organic pattern within the crisp honeycomb geometry of the structure. Although the surface of the paper softens, the stools and loungers maintain their structural integrity.
Add comment January 22, 2008
accommodating poverty

Sean Godsell an amazing architect designer, has found a clever solution for a humane cause. Designing emergency shelters for the displaced or homeless people in urban environments. The design converts into an emergency overnight accommodation. The bench lifts to reveal a woven steel mattress and the advertising hoarding is modified to act as a dispenser of blankets, food, and water. It also acts as a small gallery space where art can be exhibited. The shelter has the potential to be solar powered and its glass roof and back double as a digital projection screen.
The first prototype is located in Melbourne, Australia
For more information Sean Godsell Architects
Add comment January 11, 2008
lite2go No Packaging Required
Lite2go is an all in one lighting solution where the packaging becomes the product. An energy efficient light bulb and an electric cord are included, allowing you to setup straight from the shelf to light your home.
The design is a components are either biodegradable or recyclable. No adhesives or extra packaging is utilized so the lamp is non toxic. The light bulb included with the package is a compact, fluorescent bulb that uses less energy and lasts longer than a comparable incandescent light bulb.

Add comment January 9, 2008
VilLA NM house
In the design for this single family house the sloping site is used as a device for programmatic and volumetric organization. A box-like volume bifurcates into two separate volumes; one seamlessly following the northern slope; the other lifted above the hill creating a covered parking space and generating a split-level internal organization. The volumetric transition is generated by a set of five parallel walls that rotate along a horizontal axis from vertical to horizontal. The ruled surface maintaining this transition is repeated five times in the building. From inside the huge window strips from floor to ceiling allow a fluid continuity between interior and landscape. From the exterior the reflective glass seams to become one with its surroundings.

2 comments January 8, 2008
enter Holiday Home

Institute for contemporary art, Philadelphia
The Holiday Home is an experiential installation exploring areas in which the holiday home departs from modern design conventions. The orthogonal surfaces of the archetypal house are extruded and skewed creating the sculptural armature within which the dichotomies of home and holiday home are played out. The new architectural shape emulates escapism, the expectation of a holiday as removed from everyday routine. Visitor movement through the installation activates unexpected view corridors and the multi directional shadows create unpredictable perspectives. The perception of time is intrinsically interwoven into the project as light conditions subtly modulate; the sense of season and time of day become more abstract, as you may find on holiday where time is unbound by the frameworks of contemporary patterns of living and dwelling.
Add comment January 8, 2008
Life, sustainable comfort
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Life is a sustainable chair deign from Knoll, manufactured using clean technology in keeping with the eco design principles of reduce, reuse and recycle green guard certified, Life helps people meet the U.S. green building Council’s leed™ requirements. Uses minimum materials in construction and employs clean manufacturing technology such as integral coloring on plastic components, burnishing on the aluminium structure and VOC-free paints and adhesives Raw materials with a recycled content of 52% (plastic version) and 62 % aluminium version that provides a 100 percent recycled content chair.
Add comment December 22, 2007
Unique ceiling structure

The project is a 3500 sf art gallery in the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan. The client requested two gallery spaces, an office area, a storage packaging area, a reception desk, a meeting table where clients could scan the website for other pieces in the collection and finally a bar area for art openings. The existing space had a beam and column configuration that ran down the middle north south in a wiggly line. Initially, this existing condition was thought to be a problem. The solution was to use the pattern of the existing beam and columns to organize the space and direct the form.
Primarily the existing beam and column pattern was used to create a custom luminous ceiling that contains all the HVAC, sprinkler and lighting elements. The lines in the ceiling are made of mill finish aluminum flat bar that hold up translucent panels and, in some instances, extend from the ceiling to become light fixtures over key locations in the space. The office and packaging area were placed in the middle creating the division between front and rear galleries.

Add comment December 22, 2007
Change what you got

packaging for Re-use is a product that recycles the cardboard your laptop arrives in by changing it into a protective carrying sleeve. Assembly is easy, and all necessary materials are included in the original packaging. The cardboard casing is treated with natural wax to protect it from spills, and instead of the usual polystyrene foam , Packaging for Re-Use utilizes sheep’s wool felt which can be recycled and composted. All it takes is a few simple cuts, folds, and glue to make the transformation. Check out the other pics to see how it works. From the portfolio of Eoin McNally in Dublin, Ireland.
Add comment December 22, 2007


