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Very cool use of material in this office design in Amsterdam, employing over a kilometer of fabric, which was laser cut to fall elegantly in pale blue waves.

A welcome break from the trend of light wood-paneling that so many modern offices have turned to, using fabric that adds depth, shading, and visual interest.

Via Dezeen:

Design studio Beyond Space has created an office interior in Amsterdam that doubles as a showroom using rippling laser-cut fabricΒ to form cave-like spaces for working.

Created for Siersema Interieur, a studio that specialises in fabrics, Beyond Space looked to the nearby IJ-river to inform the design of the office in the Netherlands.

Amsterdam is one of our favorite cities on the planet. Dense, ancient, beautiful, and packed with culture, it’s a great calling card for The Netherlands, a place that we’ve come to love.

Native Amsterdammer Albert Dros has created a real love note to the city with his latest time-lapse, a stunning and vibrant film showing how alive and bustling the city of 870,000 residents is. Shot before the global pandemic put things into lockdown, it’s remarkable how many forms of traffic there are, from the famous leagues of cyclists, to the sheer number of canal boats.

Take a look at ‘Amsterdam – My Home’, and try not to get excited about travel again.

With this timelapse film I wanted to create something unique. I wanted to create a visual experience with beauty, flow and emotion. I want locals to be proud of their city when they watch this film, and tourists wanting to visit (even more). I put this all in a film packed with little details. There’s a big β€˜fun facts’ list that can all be read on a dedicated page I created.

Β  Β  Β  -Albert Dros

 

Public urination is a real annoyance in an urban city where lots of people drink and congregate. It’s smelly, dirty, and a general deterrent from the type of welcoming environment people want to spend time in.

These innovative eco urinals are made by GreenPee, and function more like an urban planter than a traditional urinal. Lined with hemp plants, the urinals offer some level of discretion, and don’t require any water to flush. In addition, they help convert the urine into organic fertilizer, and are odor free, thanks to the hemp filters.

Installed in Amsterdam, a famously popular place to drink and explore in, they’re a great alternative to, well, a public wall.

Via Dezeen:

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Users urinate into the openings on the sides of the GreenPee planters, which have an internal tank filled with hemp fibres from the cannabis plant.

The tank is emptied when full, and levels can be checked manually or by using a smart sensor that sends a message when it’s nearly full.

Once emptied, the mix of urine and hemp can be used for organic fertiliser for the city’s parks, roof gardens and urban farms.

Β  Β -Dezeen

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The Netherlands has a lot going for it, including some of the most idyllic, fairytale-like little towns and villages. Even the biggest Dutch city Amsterdam has an aesthetic quality that is second to none. Dutch photographer Albert Dros shows us the tiny town of the Zaanse Schans, which is just twenty minutes outside Amsterdam. Captured during a quiet sunny morning, Dros shows us the ideal little town bathed in fog and early morning light. Small windmills, little bakeries, and the quintessential Dutch architecture indeed make this a place that feels out of a fairytale. Via Behance:

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Your retreat home of the future might be small, and printable. At least, that’s the concept behind this Urban Cabin byΒ DUS Architects. Created entirely with 3D printing, this miniature dwelling was set up in a former industrial part of Amsterdam to showcase the ability to quickly bring a structure (and accompanying property) to life. Β The mini cabin is made from recycled bio-plastic, and at the end of it’s life, it can be entirely recycled and repurposed into something else.

The tiny property includes some lovely poplar trees, a plot of grass, and even an outdoor bathtub, making it a serene little setting, despite being surrounded by the clamor of a large city. A fascinating proof-of-concept, and DUS Architects plan to 3D print a classic Amsterdam canal house in the near future. We’re impressed, and eager to see where this technology will lead. Photography by Ossip. Via Arch Daily:

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waarmakers led lamp moss and fog 9

Innovation in packaging is great, especially when less resources can be used. Waarmakers, a Dutch design firm, has a lamp that takes that to a whole new level. Their R16 LED task lamp arrives at your door in a cardboard tube. Ingeniously, the tube is the lamp structure itself, with all the necessary pieces packaged inside. With a small amount of assembly, the slim tube lamp sets up quickly, and provides bright yet dimmable light for offices, homes, and buildings.

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Cardboard has a warm, soft appearance, and gives the R16 lamp an inviting, casual look.

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Waarmaker's R16 task lamp
Everything you need for the lamp is packaged within it’s cardboard tube.

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San Francisco Airport Terminal 2
If you’ve ever visited Terminal 2 in San Francisco, you’ve noticed the beautiful, organic net sculptures by artist Janet Echelman. The undulating forms are fluid and sculptural, yet the materials keep them light and graceful. Colossal takes a look at some of her other installations. Some really great work by Echelman.

Giant Suspended Net Installations by Janet Echelman Vancouver nets installation

Giant Suspended Net Installations by Janet Echelman Vancouver nets installation

Giant Suspended Net Installations by Janet Echelman Vancouver nets installation

Giant Suspended Net Installations by Janet Echelman Vancouver nets installation

Giant Suspended Net Installations by Janet Echelman Vancouver nets installation

Giant Suspended Net Installations by Janet Echelman Vancouver nets installation

Giant Suspended Net Installations by Janet Echelman Vancouver nets installation

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Paris

Can you guess the cities? Artist/illustrator Jazzberry Blue sells prints of these colorful city maps, simplified to graphical glory. Via Society 6:

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Amsterdam
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Stockholm
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London
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New York

 

Tobias Revell: Power Generating Mushrooms in Mumbai

It took me a while to realize that this story of oversized mushrooms in Mumbai isn’t a reality. Yet. But it’s a fascinating look at the possible future of bio-engineering for the megacities that dot the earth. A 9-minute “documentary” was made that explains the story in detail.


‘New Mumbai’ by Tobias Revell

Via DesignBoom:
Tobias Revell
, a British interaction designer, has documented the Dharavi slums of Mumbai, India, showcasing how genetically modified mushrooms have revitalized the poverty stricken city in the ‘New Mumbai’ of the future. Originally from Amsterdam, highly experimental biotechnological samples had been stolen from a dutch lab, where the fungi had been re-engineered to exponentially grow in size for use as narcotics and to create a micro-economy based off the material. As the new plant became introduced into the overpopulated but highlyΒ educated urban mass of the slums, the locals began to use it to their advantage – to both exercise freedom from the state and to provideΒ suitable living conditions.Β today, the mushroom is used to harvest energy as well as provide providing heat, light and building material for the residents of the slums of Dharavi.


Harvesting of the mushroom on city buildings


harvesting energy from the mushroom on top of a building

New Mumbai from Tobias Revell on Vimeo.

Embarrassingly, I hadn’t even heard of FITC until I came upon this 2012 introductory video for FITC Amsterdam. And a pretty amazing video it is. Future Innovation Technology Creativity is a technology conference similar to SXSW’s Interactive, held all over the world. The conference in Amsterdam just ended, but there is an upcoming conference in Toronto this spring.

About FITC
Future. Innovation. Technology. Creativity.
FITC produces design and technology focused conferences and seminars worldwide which inspire, educate and challenge attendees. Since 2002, FITC has brought together like-minded professionals and students in Toronto, Amsterdam, Tokyo, San Francisco, Chicago, Seoul, New York, Los Angeles and many other cities.

The of the library seems antiquated in the days of Kindles and Facebook. For those of us who are not in school, the reasons for us to visit the library have probably shrunk over the last decade. Despite this, a great library extends far beyond the reach of its content. The space itself becomes a temple. A place of quiet exploration, a place of calm, and a place of learning.
There are a wealth of amazing libraries throughout the world, here are five that are visually stunning.

1.) Stuttgart City Library – Germany
Just opened in November of 2011, the building of the 80-million Euro (about $108 mil. US) Stadtbibliothek am MailΓ€nder Platz began three years ago. Korean architect Eun Young Yi has created a monolithic cube with two floors underground and nine above. Essentially all of the building, both inside and out is white. The main library floors circle an open-plan with the levels connected by open staircases. Books line the outer walls of each floor.

As a cool nod to the fact that the building is a storehouse of words, the word β€œlibrary” is installed in four languages on the outside walls. On the North wall in German (the local language), West in English (lingua franca), South in Arabic (the language of ancient knowledge and of Stuttgart’s sister city, Cairo) and East in Korean (Yi’s native language).

2.) The National Library of France – Paris

The National Library of France traces its origin to the royal library founded at the Louvre by Charles V in 1368. It expanded under Louis XIV and opened to the public in 1692.

The city’s library maintains an enormous older building (shown in photos) as well as an expanded modern wing, which was built in the late 1980s. The library serves a population of over 2 million people, and is a remarkable example of Γ‰cole des Beaux Arts school of architecture.

3.) Library of Alexandria- Egypt

Egypt’s second largest city, Alexandria is also one of the oldest in the world. Often known as simply the Egyptian library, the cultural centre is located on the seashore of the Mediterranean in the city of Alexandria. The library is the memorial of the Royal Library of Alexandria destroyed in Ancient times and the modern research and educational centre at the same time.

Shaped like a disc, inspired by the rising sun, this modern building was completed in 2002. Located very close to the site of the ancient library of Alexandria, which was the predecessor for all libraries today. Indeed, some of its famous alumni include geometry whiz Euclid and the library’s third director Eratosthenes, who proved the earth is a sphere centuries before Columbus sailed to the Americas. Others included mathema-tician Archimedes, Herophilus, who advanced medicine with dissections of the human body, and Aristarchus, an early promoter of the idea that the earth revolved around the sun. The ancient library existed from 290 B.C. to 415 C.E.

Today, the modern successor is a bold space, rising 11 stories, with four of them underground.

4.) National Library of Belarus

Located in Minsk, the National Library of Belarus cannot be criticized for being conservative.Β  Its main architectural component has the shape of a rhombicuboctahedron. The library’s new building was designed by architects Mihail Vinogradov and Viktor Kramarenko and opened on 16 June 2006.

The library has 22 floors, and the entire exterior is a light display, that can show a stunning variety of patterns. Traditional, it is not. But it’s not easily forgettable, which hopefully means it will be a great resource of people of Belarus.

5.) Rijkmuseum Library, Amsterdam -The Netherlands

The Rijksmuseum Research Library is a private academic art history library whose purpose is preservation. It’s also a fantastically beautiful space, with stunning collections of priceless books, and an equally stunning architectural space.

Look for the second installment of ‘Amazing Libraries’ in the coming weeks. There are a wealth of brilliant libraries throughout the world, this is just the beginning.

Just returned from ten days in northern Europe, and the last five in Amsterdam. It was my second visit, and a thoroughly, exceedingly more insightful trip the second time around.

Not bounded by the need to visit coffeeshops or worry about stolen bags at the hostel, my pals and I rented a beautiful apartment in the Jordaan, a close-in neighborhood that hugs the western canals. Bikes were of course the preferred and only sensible form of transport, and once familiar with the busy traffic that pedals past, it was a joy.

The nature of the city is boisterous and diverse, but also can be strangely calm and quiet. For all the nonsense of Damm square, the more quiet alleys and canals hold far more culture, history and architectural significance than anywhere else I’ve ever traveled.

I’m a sucker for good design, and there’s something about the slightly off-kilter, brick canal houses that scream tasteful and stylish at the same time. Some are clad with contrasting shutters, others are impossibly slim. Almost all of them are intriguing.

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As I’m literally still returning from travels, stay tuned for more photos and thoughts.