venerdì 27 maggio 2011
sabato 21 maggio 2011
NVR Texture...


martedì 17 maggio 2011
lunedì 16 maggio 2011
lunedì 9 maggio 2011
Destination Design: 21c Museum Hotel in Louisville
This post comes to you thanks to Meghan from designtripper, currently on a giant road trip from Detroit to New Orleans, uncovering design in unexpected places.
Louisville's 21c Museum Hotel opened five years ago, but the cutting-edge art hotel seems to only get increasingly more relevant and interesting. Designed by New York-based architect Deborah Berke, it's still the only museum hotel in the country. And the exhibits, largely comprised of works from owners Steve Wilson and Laura Lee Brown's vast personal collection, change regularly. The couple, who lives on a 1,000-acre farm nearby, believe they can help save farmland through urban revitalization.
Pull up to the front door — a string of historic cast-iron buildings that Louisville is known for–an oversized chandelier hangs outside over the sidewalk, letting you know this is no ordinary experience. Plastic red penguins — discovered at the Venice Biennale — peer down from roof. They were so popular in the debut exhibit, they've become a 21c art mascot of sorts. Inside, an installation of four sculptures of naked children by Judy Fox loom playfully over the reception desk. The rest of the lobby looks every bit the part of contemporary museum. Cuba Now — 90 paintings, photographs, sculpture, mixed media, video installations by Cuban artists — makes a huge, compelling statement in the space.
The 21c has become such a major hotel success story, plans for two new locations are currently underway: one in Cincannati, the other in Bentonville, Arkansas. Both will be designed by Deborah Burke, who the owners admire for her design without ego.
The hotel also has a fantastic restaurant, Proof, with rotating exhibits, a bar that overlooks historic Main Street and a menu that supports local agriculture.
Photo by Josh Minogue courtesy of 21c Museum
Photo: Kenneth Hayden courtesy of 21c Museum Hotel
Photo: Kenneth Hayden courtesy of 21c Museum Hotel
The 90 guest rooms are all spare and serene, creating a comfortable experience for the guests and placing the emphasis on the art and building itself. One of the star amenities is a 21c Pip Mobile — a Lincoln Towne Car stretch limo covered entirely with shiny red glass by Louisvillian Monica Mahoney, who's a full-time artist with a studio in Clifton.
Photo: Kenneth Hayden courtesy of 21c Museum Hotel
The 21c is open 24 hours a day, so visitors (both guests and art gawkers) have around-the-clock access to the exhibits. And that's the a common through-line to the approach here — accessibility. Owners Steve Wilson and Laura Lee Brown, who wanted to make a point that art doesn't have to be behind a velvet rope, included a handful of site-specific, permanent installations that beg for interaction.
A favorite is Text Rain by Camille Utterback and Romy Achituv in the elevator bank — an interactive projection that rains little words from a poem around shadow reflections on the wall — and In the Absence of Voyeurism #6 and #7 by Sean Bidic (below), videos in the public restrooms that feature eyes from people all part of a blind dart-throwing team.
Photo by Kenneth Hayden, ©2008.
Are you packed yet?
What: 21c Museum Hotel
Where: 700 W Main St. Louisville, KY 40202 (map it)
How much: Rooms starting at around $300
Highlights: It's the only museum hotel in the country, designed by architect Deborah Berke, and features a red glass Pip mobile.
Design draw: Art, art, and more art!
Book it: 21c Museum Hotel
Unless otherwise indicated, photos by Meghan McEwen.
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© 2011 Design Milk | Posted by Jaime in Architecture, Interior Design | Permalink | No comments
domenica 8 maggio 2011
sabato 7 maggio 2011





Questa residenza nel Parco Regionale Pavilniai, nei pressi della capitale lituana di Vilnius, è una di quelle che dobbiamo solo far notare, anche se non è né nuovo, né sconosciuto a molti lettori.
La combinazione fiducioso di storia e le moderne esigenze di una famiglia di alto livello è stato raggiunto dalla studio di architettura G. Natkevicius & Partners .
martedì 3 maggio 2011
one crystal chandelier
This is the perfect add as you go along chandelier, where anyone can start with just a single crystal and work their way up the chandelier ladder. By Thomas Feichtner.
One Crystal Chandelier is a hanging light fixture reduced to its essence by Viennese designer Thomas Feichtner. A cable runs through a curved tube which is fitted with an LED at the end to provide light. This tube's curvature is such that one can hang a crystal from it—and this crystal is then lit from below. The design is a greatly simplified one which consciously breaks with the historically more formal and representative role that crystal chandeliers have played. It is not powerful opulence, but rather a fascinating simplicity that dominates this work. And it is the use of LED technology that makes it possible to take this approach to its logical conclusion. The concept becomes particularly clear within the context of the producer's history and in light of the way it contrasts with traditional chandelier designs. One Crystal Chandelier is an affordable lighting element for a design-loving but no less traditional public—an "entry-level" chandelier which can be expanded by adding further crystals as one sees fit.