Saturday, 9 May 2020

Live tour of design exhibition at historic Austrian castle with curator Alice Stori Liechtenstein as part of VDF

Live tour of Schloss Hollenegg at VDF

Today VDF teams up with Schloss Hollenegg for a live tour of the historic castle in Austria with curator Alice Stori Liechtenstein at 6:00pm UK time.

The castle, which dates back to 1163, is home to Schloss Hollenegg for Design, a cultural programme established by Stori Liechtenstein in 2015.

Schloss Hollenegg live tour for VDF
Schloss Hollenegg in Austria is home to cultural programme Schloss Hollenegg for Design

Today sees the opening of Walden, an exhibition exploring our relationship with the wilder side of the natural world, which features works by 22 designers.

On the tour, which will be live streamed on Dezeen's Instagram account, Stori Liechtenstein will discuss the pieces, which are dotted around the castle and its grounds, as well as recounting the history of her home.

Walden by Schloss Hollenegg for VDF
The Walden exhibition explores our relationship with nature

"Many of the projects in the exhibition are about self-sufficiency and about finding a new approach to doing, making, living," said Stori Liechtenstein, who commissioned many of the works for the Walden exhibition.

"It is the time to bring nature back in our everyday life; not the romanticised, sanitised, domesticated version of it, but the gritty, wild stuff. The current narrative around the environmental crisis offers conflicting and confusing information, it has been wrongly politicised, and often induces guilt without offering solutions."

"This makes accepting that our lifestyles need to be dramatically transformed, a painful process: we procrastinate, waiting for a miracle cure," she added.

Schloss Hollenegg live tour for VDF
Schloss Hollenegg is the seat of the Liechtenstein family

"In order to find the solution, perhaps, we need first to stop seeing our environment for our use, to be tamed into a garden. We need to embrace the undomesticated, feral side of nature and allow pockets of wilderness to take over, in order to live with the simplicity of the philosopher," Liechtenstein said.

Pieces from the show will be available for purchase via digital design gallery Adorno.

Located in Austria's Styria province, Schloss Hollenegg is the seat of the Liechtenstein family. It features elements of multiple architectural styles that have been added to the original medieval building over three years.

The fortified palace has a Renaissance courtyard modelled on the Landhaus palace in nearby Graz and a Baroque church.

Schloss Hollenegg
Murals in the Schloss Hollenegg

Usually closed to the public, the castle opens once a year to the public for its annual design show. This year's public opening has been cancelled due to coronavirus, but the exhibition has been mounted and will be brought to life via the live tour and an accompanying video.

Participants in the Walden exhibition are Crafting Plastics, Charlap Hyman & Herrero, Calico Wallpaper, Marlène Huissoud, cc-tapis, Klemens Schillinger, Sophie Dries, Kaia, Arvid & Marie, Thomas Ballouhey, Thomas Barger, BNAG, Commonplace, Marianne Drews, Jonas Edvard, Destroyers/Builders, Marc Leschelier, mischer’traxler, Odd Matter, Marylou Petot, Studio B Severin, Study O Portable, Studiotut, Evalie Wagner and Sander Wassink.

About Virtual Design Festival

Virtual Design Festival, the world's first digital design festival, runs from 15 April to 30 June 2020. It is a platform that will bring the architecture and design world together to celebrate the culture and commerce of our industry, and explore how it can adapt and respond to extraordinary circumstances.

VDF will host a rolling programme of online talks, lectures, movies, product launches and more, complementing and supporting fairs and festivals around the world that have had to be postponed or cancelled and it will provide a platform for design businesses, so they can, in turn, support their supply chains.

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Woodwork and skylights stream light into Noe Valley Residence in San Francisco

Noe Valley Residence by Malcolm Davis Architecture

American firm Malcolm Davis Architecture has placed skylights over existing wood framing to streak the interiors of this San Francisco house with beams of light.

Malcolm Davis Architecture was enlisted to renovate the residence located in Noe Valley, a neighbourhood in the California city known for its streets lined with Victorian and Edwardian style homes.

Noe Valley Residence by Malcolm Davis Architecture

Called Noe Valley Residence, the project maintained many of the house's traditional elements, including its bay window and beige stucco facade to preserve its connection with the neighbourhood.

To modernise and expand the house, the firm added large glass windows and a rear extension that spans two levels to the rear of the house. It joins a number of projects in the city that have traditional fronts and contemporary extensions in the back.

Noe Valley Residence by Malcolm Davis Architecture

With the addition, the studio was able to increase the house's size from 1,900 square feet (176.5 square metres) to 3,000 square feet (278.7 square metres).

"The goal of this Noe Valley renovation and expansion was to maintain a connection to the neighbourhood context, while maximising access to daylight, the garden and the views beyond," the studio said.

"Reinterpreted and expanded in a modern vocabulary, the house is now a relaxed and inviting family home."

Noe Valley Residence by Malcolm Davis Architecture

Grey lap siding lined with a row of windows covers the upper portion of the rear facade. Vertically laid cedar wood clads the rear extension that juts out from the ground floor of the existing structure.

A deck on top of the wood addition is fronted with four panes of glass that form a railing facing the grassy backyard, which is divided into several small courtyards and patio spaces.

Noe Valley Residence by Malcolm Davis Architecture

Along the northern side of the house, the studio placed a series of skylights over existing wood framing that was repurposed and left exposed. Light streams through the gaps between the beams to project a pattern of diagonal stripes against the interior walls.

Malcolm Davis Architecture worked with local designer Lori Yeomans to design the bright interiors.

Noe Valley Residence by Malcolm Davis Architecture

In the kitchen, the white walls and cabinetry are contrasted by the ceiling clad with cedar wood planks. The large white island at the centre of the room is also lined with a row of the wood slabs on one of its faces.

Similar cedar accents feature in other parts of the house including as a decorative wall in a bedroom and on the built-in coat rack in the entry hall.

Noe Valley Residence by Malcolm Davis Architecture

Other elements of the design include a thin desk and shelving unit built into a small alcove, a black textured fireplace and pair of sliding glass doors that open to the wood deck overlooking the backyard.

Malcolm Davis Architecture has completed a number of projects in California such as a holiday home formed by two cedar volumes and a house in Silicon Valley that embraces its natural setting.

 

Photography is by Joe Fletcher.

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Architecture, design and engineering activities for children in lockdown

Architecture, design and engineering activities for children in lockdown

Architects, designers and cultural institutions, including Foster + Partners, Dyson and the V&A, have created educational activities for children to ward off the boredom of coronavirus lockdown. Here are five of the most entertaining.


Architecture, design and engineering activities for children in lockdown

Arquitecture para colorear by Carmelina&Aaurelio Taller de Arquitectura

Mexican studio Carmelina&Aaurelio Taller de Arquitectura has created a free to download architectural colouring book.

The book encourages people to recolour well-known buildings including Casa Barragán by Luis Barragán and the Niterói Contemporary Art Museum by Oscar Niemeyer.

"What do you think if we change the colours of the buildings that surround us?" asked the studio in the book's introduction.

"It doesn't matter if you're five or 105, this book was made for defacing. There are no instructions, the only rule is experiment!"


Architecture, design and engineering activities for children in lockdown

Challenge Cards by James Dyson Foundation

The James Dyson Foundation has created 44 engineering and science activities for children in lockdown, which can be completed using common household objects.

Divided into 22 science tasks and 22 engineering activities, the Challenge Cards include tasks like making a ballon car and designing a bridge from spaghetti.


Architecture, design and engineering activities for children in lockdown

#Architecturefromhome by Foster + Partners

British architecture studio Foster + Partners has created a series of architecture challenges called #architecturefromhome. Tasks include building a paper skyscraper and building a city.

"The recent lockdown has offered us an opportunity to create a number of online initiatives that educate and entertain our online community and support parents and carers with children who may not attending school at the moment," said Katy Harris, senior partner at Foster + Partners.

"The #architecturefromhome initiative is a chance for all of us to have some fun and learn at the same time," she told Dezeen.


Architecture, design and engineering activities for children in lockdown

#LetsMakeWednesdays by V&A

London's V&A museum is curating a weekly series of creative lockdown challenges for children aged between seven and 11. Each of the tasks challenges children to create an item from household objects that is inspired by something in the museum's collection.

So far the museum has challenged the children to design clothes, put on a performance and recycle something old into something new.


Architecture, design and engineering activities for children in lockdown

Architecture at Home by the Architecture Center

Architecture at Home is a series of tasks to entertain children created by the Center for Architecture, which is operated by the New York chapter of the American Institute of Architects (AIA).

Activities include baking your own building ornaments, taking part in an architectural scavenger hunt using Google Map, and making a pop-up building from a paper bag.

The post Architecture, design and engineering activities for children in lockdown appeared first on Dezeen.



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This week's VDF highlights included Carlo Ratti, Space Popular and Iris van Herpen plus a live drone performance and a cocktail masterclass

VDF week four highlights

Week four of VDF featured Bar Basso, Studio Drift, Adam Nathaniel Furman, Sevil Peach, Bureau Spectacular, Arthur Mamou-Mani and much more!

Virtual Design Festival, the world's first online design festival, runs until 30 June. For the full schedule of upcoming events, visit dezeen.com/vdf/schedule.


Monday 4 May

VDF x Dezeen Awards: with the Dezeen Awards entry deadline just a few weeks away, we brought together eight judges and winners to discuss the role of awards in architecture and design as well as topics including virtual reality and designing with gaming engines. Participants included Arthur Mamou-Mani, Adam Nathaniel Furman, Sevil Peach and more.

Screentime with Carlo Ratti: today's live interview featured Italian architect Carlo Ratti, who explained why hospitals and universities are "dinosaurs" that need design in order to remain useful to society.


Studio Drift uses drones to create beating heart above Rotterdam in tribute to healthcare workers

Tuesday 5 May

VDF x Friedman Benda: our collaboration with the New York City gallery kicked off with the first of its Design in Dialogue conversations. Today's saw curator and historian Glenn Adamson in conversation with pioneering architect James Wise.

Screentime with Space Popular:  Lara Lesmes and Fredrik Hellberg of design studio Space Popular discussed designing in virtual reality in a live interview with Dezeen's Marcus Fairs.

VDF x Studio Drift: we teamed up with the Dutch design duo for a live interview followed by a live stream of their spectacular Franchise Freedom drone performance in Rotterdam.


Jimenez Lai is founder of architecture studio Bureau Spectacular

Wednesday 6 May

VDF x Iris van Herpen: we launched our exclusive series of video interviews with the Dutch fashion designer.

Screentime with Jimenez Lai: Bureau Spectacular's Jimenez Lai discussed how he started out wanting to be a comic artist in today's live interview direct from Los Angeles.


Bar Basso owner Maurizio Stocchetto appears live as part of VDF

Thursday 7 May

VDF x Bar Basso: Maurizio Stochetto, owner of the design world's favourite bar, shared his Bar Basso cocktail recipes and told the history of the legendary Milanese institution in this live interview and masterclass.

VDF x Iris van Herpen: today we published the second of our three exclusive video interviews with the Dutch fashion designer. 


Friday 8 May

A day off: today was a holiday in the UK so the VDF team had a much-needed rest! However, we still managed to publish...

VDF x Iris van Herpen: the third exclusive video interview with Iris van Herpen went live today.


Previous weeks

Did you miss week three? Read our summary of the highlights, including a video message from Ben van Berkel and an exclusive screening of Gary Hustwit's Dieter Rams documentary.

Did you miss week two? Read the summary of the highlights from the second week, including Ron Arad, SO-IL, Kunlé Adeyemi, Nelly Ben Hayoun, Beatie Wolfe and Studio Drift.

Did you miss week one? Read the summary of the first week's highlights include live interviews with Li Edelkoort and Klein Dytham Architecture plus the now-legendary VDF launch movie.

For more information about VDF or to join the mailing list, email vdf@dezeen.com.

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Eight houses designed to show off the owner's car

Car house roudnup dezeen

Hot wheels and cool rims are the highlight of these eight private residential projects where the architect has made a car in its garage the focal point.


Autohaus by Matt Fajkus Architecture

Autohaus, USA, by Matt Fajkus Architecture

Built for a car collector in Austin, Texas, Autohaus' entire ground floor is given over to a garage and workshop.

Floor-to-ceiling glass walls frame the parking space, and the gabled living area cantilevers over an outdoor parking space to frame and shelter the car below.

Find out more about Autohaus ›


Car house roudnup dezeen

House in Takamatsu, Japan, by FujiwaraMuro Architects

FujiwaraMuro Architects designed a single opening in the bunker-style facade of this house in Takamatsu to draw attention to the owner's sports car.

The all-white home is otherwise highly private. Inside, a glass wall gives a full view of the car from a downstairs living room.

Find out more about House in Takamatsu ›


Smilgu House by Plazma

Smilgu House, Lithuania, by Plazma Architecture Studio

A glass-walled corner of the ground floor of this house in Vilnius puts the owner's car proudly on display.

Timber cladding helps the house blend with the trees, making the garage a focal point of the front facade. To the rear, the house has huge double height windows looking out over the garden.

Find out more about Smilgu House ›


Garage house Lisbon by Fala Atelier

Garage House, Portugal, by Fala Atelier

Fala Atelier converted a garage in Lisbon into a house for a young couple – and kept its original purpose.

Their little car can be driven straight into the open-plan house, which can be divided into separate rooms using brightly-coloured curtains.

Find out more about Garage House ›


Pagoda House by I/O architects

Pagoda House, Bulgaria, by I/O Architects

Pagoda House takes its name from the owner's beloved vintage Mercedes Pagoda, which has pride of place in a glass-walled garage.

The house is partially submerged into its sloping site, with the classic car located at the bottom of a timber staircase and framed against a raw concrete back wall.

Find out more about Pagoda House ›


Car house roudnup dezeen

Basic House, Thailand, by Brownhouses

This house in Bangkok for an avid car collector has space for six cars to be parked two abreast in a glass-walled garage on the ground floor.

A home office runs along the side of the car display area, and a playroom complete with a sand pit and toy cars for the owner's children sits at the end.

Find out more about Basic House ›


House for a racing car driver by Stempel and Tesar

Family House, Czech Republic, by Stempel & Tesar

Czech architecture studio Stempel & Tesar built this house for a racing car driver with an open-air garage sheltered under a balcony.

Much of the ground floor of the house is given over to a workshop, where the owner has space to tinker with two more cars.

Find out more about Family House ›


Car house roudnup dezeen

Garage Loft, Netherlands, by Studio OxL

This single-storey house in Arnhem that was once a carpenter's workshop has doors that open up to allow the client to park their electric sports car in the middle of the shiny white living room.

Because it's electric, it can sit in the middle of the house without the risk of pollution or damage from its exhaust fumes.

Find out more about Garage Loft ›

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