Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts from February, 2012

Shipping Container Cabin by Leed Cabins

Shipping Container Cabin by Leed Cabins

Please Godlet this be mine someday!

Please Godlet this be mine someday!

Tiny House on the Lake

Tiny House on the Lake

Tiny Floating House in Portland

Tiny Floating House in Portland

Tiny living room/office/guest bedroom by Matroshka 

Tiny living room/office/guest bedroom by Matroshka 

House in Nakamura / Level Architects

House in Nakamura / Level Architects

Bookshelf/Book Rackgreat for small spaces!

Bookshelf/Book Rackgreat for small spaces!

This is AWESOME!

This is AWESOME!

subtilitas: The reflective metallic sill in ACT Romegialli’s rower’s hall in Mandello Lario generates some stunning lighting patterns throughout the day; a rippled effect similar to the adjacent river the rowers practice on. Via.

subtilitas: The reflective metallic sill in ACT Romegialli’s rower’s hall in Mandello Lario generates some stunning lighting patterns throughout the day; a rippled effect similar to the adjacent river the rowers practice on. Via.

enochliew: Chalmers Campus Lindholmen by Wingårdh Arkitektkontor Rotating screens shade the top floor and follow the sun at it circles the building, while the angled walls provide shade for the lower levels.   

enochliew: Chalmers Campus Lindholmen by Wingårdh Arkitektkontor Rotating screens shade the top floor and follow the sun at it circles the building, while the angled walls provide shade for the lower levels.   

twinfawns: Net by design collective Numen consists of multiple layers of flexible nets suspended in the air. The flat layers of the net are subsequently connected to one another on counterpoints thus forming a “floating landscape” open for visitors to climb in and explore. The result is an op-art social sculpture (or a community hammock) relating to topics of instability, levitation and regression. 

twinfawns: Net by design collective Numen consists of multiple layers of flexible nets suspended in the air. The flat layers of the net are subsequently connected to one another on counterpoints thus forming a “floating landscape” open for visitors to climb in and explore. The result is an op-art social sculpture (or a community hammock) relating to topics of instability, levitation and regression.