Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts from March, 2012

enochliew: Yan Lane by Justin Mallia Mallia describes, ‘exposing the structure and workmanship allows the frame to be experienced on the interior and exterior and avoids fragmentation.’

enochliew: Yan Lane by Justin Mallia Mallia describes, ‘exposing the structure and workmanship allows the frame to be experienced on the interior and exterior and avoids fragmentation.’

ninakix: House of arts and culture proposal by KAPUTT! Mainly I just love how this thing looks like a fractured piece of earth with molten lava underneath. The imagery is beautiful. (via)

ninakix: House of arts and culture proposal by KAPUTT! Mainly I just love how this thing looks like a fractured piece of earth with molten lava underneath. The imagery is beautiful. (via)

i. Room 302 designed by Yuko Nagayama: The room is completely white.  Upon first glance you only see wood and white pebbles everywhere.  According to the designer “this makes the space change instantly as if snow falls in a city landscape; gaps in time and material link up naturally.”  The space seems uncomfortable at first with only rough pebbles to walk on “The space does not adapt itself to you, but you adapt to it.  The space awakens a latent natural instinct that everybody appears to carry within but is normally not activated.” ii. Room 308 designed by Pieke Bergmans: Light and optical illusion are at play in this room ”…it’s not just about the light in this room. You think you enter a regular hotel-room, but when you have a closer look, you see that the objects behave peculiar; the bed is crawling up the wall. The chair is desperately stretching out to get closer to the table. The lights are entangled and the toothbrushes are totally into one and another. But what else would you expect from a LLove hotel… everything has fallen in LLove!”

i. Room 302 designed by Yuko Nagayama: The room is completely white.  Upon first glance you only see wood and white pebbles everywhere.  According to the designer “this makes the space change instantly as if snow falls in a city landscape; gaps in time and material link up naturally.”  The space seems uncomfortable at first with only rough pebbles to walk on “The space does not adapt itself to you, but you adapt to it.  The space awakens a latent natural instinct that everybody appears to carry within but is normally not activated.” ii. Room 308 designed by Pieke Bergmans: Light and optical illusion are at play in this room ”…it’s not just about the light in this room. You think you enter a regular hotel-room, but when you have a closer look, you see that the objects behave peculiar; the bed is crawling up the wall. The chair is desperately stretching out to get closer to the table. The lights are entangled and the toothbrushes are totally into one and another. But what else would you

Tree House Escape

Tree House Escape

Príncipe Felipe Science Museum / Santiago Calatrava

Príncipe Felipe Science Museum / Santiago Calatrava

(via 500px / Photo “Inner Space III” by Roland Shainidze)

(via 500px / Photo “Inner Space III” by Roland Shainidze)

inthenoosphere: Taking inspiration from the surrounding mountain range in Nanshan, the newly designed Chongqing Mountain City Sales Office has come to life. The interior architecture of the office, designed by One Plus Partnership, has its valleys and its peaks. The space is fitted with an abstract version of a mountain, by connecting triangular grey marble faces to one another. The “mountain range” is central in the office, and custom built angular bronze desks are randomly scattered around architectural element. A field of tube lighting drapes down from the ceilings creating an aesthetic of a rain shower pounding down on the rocks.(via KNSTRCT)

inthenoosphere: Taking inspiration from the surrounding mountain range in Nanshan, the newly designed Chongqing Mountain City Sales Office has come to life. The interior architecture of the office, designed by One Plus Partnership, has its valleys and its peaks. The space is fitted with an abstract version of a mountain, by connecting triangular grey marble faces to one another. The “mountain range” is central in the office, and custom built angular bronze desks are randomly scattered around architectural element. A field of tube lighting drapes down from the ceilings creating an aesthetic of a rain shower pounding down on the rocks.(via KNSTRCT)