Sunday 15 December 2013

Prahan Hotel

This hotel in Melbourne, Australia, uses concrete pipes to create booths on the front facade of the hotel, and creates a stack of circular views into the interior.


The pipes create individual scenes of each of the booths.




Tuesday 10 December 2013

What Happens When

What Happens When is a restaurant installation by the design group The Metrics. The room is painted from floor to ceiling in a dark grey and white furniture is used which stands out boldy against the dark grey backdrop.


The ceiling hosts a grid of hooks which can be used to suspend various objects, giving the space convenient flexibility.






This simple procedure means that the feel of the space can be changed dramatically with minimum disruption.

Thursday 21 November 2013

Design LED

This week I visited Lux Live and saw a product called Design LED which is a lighting technology comprised of LEDs set within a thin, transparent, flexible substrate.



You can watch a demonstration video here: Video
The product does not need a heatsink and the LEDs can be spread further apart or grouped closer together for lower or higher light outputs.
The possible applications for this product are endless.

Wednesday 13 November 2013

Oslo Opera House

Last year I visited Oslo and saw the Opera House there. 


The building has a glass facade with the internal structure clad in oak. The outermost spaces within this structure have narrow openings in flowing shapes, allowing visitors views out into the foyer and beyond to the surrounding harbour.




The lighting to these areas is provided by small square lights recessed into the outer wall close to the floor as well as concealed cove lighting to the top of the inner wall.


The sloping plaza around the building allows visitors to see into the building from many different angles, allowing them to appreciate the unusual geometry.


The building is particularly striking at night, when the lighting to the interior creates wedges of light in the sharply sloping surroundings.


Saturday 9 November 2013

Wahaca

Last month I ate at a restaurant called Wahaca. The menu is based on Mexican street food, and the interior design takes inspiration from street stalls.


Corrugated metal sheets in combination with timber reference ramshackle market stalls, and brightly coloured gloss paints are used in combination with raw materials.



Wednesday 30 October 2013

Snog Covent Garden

Snog is a chain of frozen yogurt shops, one of which can be found in Covent Garden, London.


The decorative lighting in this shop is made up of a matrix of small spherical lights, suspended from the ceiling on poles of differing length. The colours of these lights change in waves through the spectrum, creating a mesmerising flow of colours.
The floor is finished with a grass effect vinyl, and the furniture resembles white fungus sprouting from it.


Monday 30 September 2013

Lucien Pellat-Finet Store - Kengo Kuma


This shop, designed by Kengo Kuma for the fashion designer Lucien Pellat-Finet, and located in Osaka, Japan makes use of a plywood honeycomb structure. These unevenly shaped and sized compartments provide shelving to be used for displaying items on sale.



The interior is reminiscent of a bee hive with its organic curving walls and ceilings combined with the honeycomb structure.

I like the way that these honeycomb shapes are also visible from outside the shop and how gaps allow larger areas of the glass to be exposed to allow for better views in and out of the shop.

Source: DesignBoom

Sunday 15 September 2013

John Procario Lighting

These lighting sculptures are created by steam bending thin pieces of wood to create fluid shapes. A flexible LED strip and diffuser are then applied to one side of the wood.

The appearance that the wood has been split apart to reveal an illuminated interior is quite mesmerising. 

Procario currently only appears to make table-top lighting in this form. I can imagine a taller, floor standing version, or suspended version would be very beautiful.


















Wednesday 4 September 2013

Paseo MarĂ­timo de la Playa Poniente, Spain

This seafront promenade creates a colourful and practical route for pedestrians to navigate this beach. The many access routes down to the beach as well as the overhanging edges make the whole of this structure useful and elegant.


The shape of the waves arriving at the beach can clearly be seen mirrored in the form of the promenade.


The paving graduates through the spectrum creating zones of different colours which merge together gradually.


These colour zones make navigating the beach much easier, for example: friends can arrange to meet at a particular colour zone.


Overhanging areas can be used for shelter.


These overhangs are well lit at night, discouraging undesirable activities and providing illumination to the nearby beach area.


Source: publicspace.org


Blog Restart

I have previously used this blog to document the journey through my masters in interior design. I will now use it to document any interesting design discoveries I make. This will cover interior design, architecture, product design, sustainability and I'm sure many more!