Monday, 1 June 2020

Christo, the artist known for his epic wrapping artworks, has died aged 84

“Beauty, science and art will always triumph” – the artist and his wife Jeanne-Claude transformed world landmarks into sculptures and made giant installations in nature.



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Entries for Dezeen Awards 2020 close tomorrow

There is only 1 day left to enter Dezeen Awards 2020. Entries close tomorrow at 23:59 UK time.

To help you finalise your submission today, we've put together a checklist so you can make sure your entry is complete and ready to submit:

Are you eligible? Dezeen Awards is open to registered companies and individual designers over the age of 18. Your project must have been completed between 3 June 2018 and 2 June 2020 to be eligible.

Create an account. You will need to create a Dezeen Awards account to enter, if you do not already have one.

Select your category. There are 36 project categories and six studio categories that you can enter. You can enter the same project into multiple categories.

Describe your project. You will need to provide a short and long project description, telling us and the judges a bit about your project or product. Explain why you should win a Dezeen Award. Tell us how your project fulfils the three criteria: beautiful, innovative and beneficial.

Upload images. You can upload up to eleven images to support your entry. Please include a variety of images including photographs, plans and drawings. Do not include renderings or digital visualisations. Images need to be 10MB or less. Your hero image needs to be cropped to a square format.

Credit and caption your images. Make sure that all of your images are correctly credited where appropriate and captioned to describe what they depict.

Video links (optional). Include a URL link to a video of your project if relevant. Additional credits. Make sure to credit everyone involved in the project.

Get permission from the architect or designer. If you are entering on behalf of the architect or designer, you will need to confirm that you have their permission to do so and provide us with their details.

Payment. Your entry will be submitted once payment has been processed. You must make payment online using a debit or credit card.

Questions. If you have any questions or need help, please email awards@dezeen.com.

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ArkDes, Ilse Crawford, Alcova and Farshid Moussavi feature at VDF this week

Week eight schedule VDF

Week eight of the Virtual Design Festival starts this Monday with a collaboration with ArkDes, Sweden's national centre for architecture and design, taking visitors on a virtual 360-degree tour of the opening of its new exhibition, and much more.

We also talk about upcoming industry trends with Lixil chief design officer Paul Flowers and show new touchless and 3D-printed collections as part of our collaboration with Grohe, the VDF headline sponsor.

Designer Ilse Crawford and industrial designer Benjamin Wilson will take part in two live discussions with Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs, presented by Braun, and Theodora Alfredsdottir and Patternity join us for our Screentime design series sponsored by Philips TV and Sound.

On Thursday, we showcase the work of 10 designers in collaboration with Milanese design platform Alcova, while the Friday brings a takeover from Austrian Fashion, which presents the work of 15 contemporary fashion and accessories designers.

Iranian-born British architect Farshid Moussavi is this week's guest on our Screentime architecture series, sponsored by Enscape.

We are now more than halfway through VDF. To catch up on what you've missed so far, check out Fairs' selection of highlights from the first half of the festival. For what's to come, see the full VDF schedule. All times are UK times and are liable to change.


Monday 1 June

VDF x ArkDes

For this daylong takeover, Virtual Design festival will showcase a 360-degree virtual vernissage from ArkDes, Sweden's national centre for architecture and design, as well as a live interview with ArkDes director Kieran Long, an interview with artist Linda Tegg, and more.

11.00am Virtual 360-degree vernissage of Kiruna Forever 

A virtual visit that lets you explore the latest exhibition at ArkDes, with over a hundred works by architects, city planners and artists, before it opens on June 2.

12.00pm Kiruna Forever 

Take a closer look at the project behind Kiruna Forever – how do you move an entire city?

1:00pm Interview: Linda Tegg

An interview with Australian artist Linda Tegg, whose Infield project has changed the entrance of ArkDes from asphalt car park to a meadowland.

3.00pm Virtual vernissage: WEIRD SENSATION FEELS GOOD

Take the opportunity to see ArkDes' new exhibition about ASMR, featuring global ASMR artists as well as commercial pieces and works from TV artist Bob Ross, from your own home.

4.00pm Interview with Kieran Long

ArkDes' director Kieran Long in conversation with Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs, live from Stockholm.

www.arkdes.se

2:00pm Screentime: Theodora Alfredsdottir

Icelandic product designer Theodora Alfredsdottir joins Marcus Fairs for a presentation and conversation about her work in this Screentime design episode sponsored by Philips TV and Sound.

www.theodoraalfredsdottir.com


Tuesday 2 June

VDF x Grohe

Today's Virtual Design Festival is a collaboration with our headline sponsor, bathroom and kitchen manufacturer Grohe. Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs will discuss upcoming industry trends with Paul Flowers, the chief design officer of Lixil, and Grohe will present its touchless and 3D-printed collections and their relevance to health and wellbeing.

www.grohe.co.uk


Wednesday 3 June

VDF x Braun

German brand Braun presents two talks on the theme "Times of change and good design" as part of today's VDF line-up.

The first talk features industrial designer Benjamin Wilson and philosopher, writer and curator Dr. Peter Kapos, followed by a second talk with designer Ilse Crawford. Both talks will be moderated by Marcus Fairs.

www.uk.braun.com


Thursday 4 June

VDF x Alcova

VDF teams up with Milanese design platform Alcova on Thursday 4 June to present the work of 10 designers, studios and brands from its stable.

2:00pm Screentime: Patternity

Anna Murray of London design studio and creative organisation Patternity, which aims to share the positive power of patterns with the world, is today's interviewee for our Screentime design series sponsored by Philips TV and Sound.

www.patternity.org


Friday 5 June

VDF x Austrian Fashion

Today's collaboration with Austrianfashion.net, the platform for Austrian contemporary fashion design, will showcase the work of 15 designers working in fields ranging from jewellery to footwear and fashion.

www.austrianfashion.net

3:00pm Screentime: Farshid Moussavi

Iranian-born British architect Farshid Moussavi will discuss her work, which includes cultural centres, retail spaces, apartment blocks, museums and more, with Marcus Fairs as part of our Screentime series sponsored by Enscape.

www.farshidmoussavi.com


Virtual Design Festival, the world's first digital design festival, runs from 15 April to 30 June 2020 and is sponsored by bathroom and kitchen manufacturer Grohe.

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Cardboard hospital beds that double as coffins developed in Colombia

Emergency bed and coffin by ABC Displays

A Colombian company has created an emergency hospital bed from cardboard that can be quickly assembled and transformed into a coffin in response to the coronavirus crisis.

ABC Displays, a company in Bogotá that specialises in advertising materials, has started making and distributing the low-cost bed for coronavirus patients.

In the worst-case scenario, each bed can be rapidly reconfigured to become a cardboard coffin.

Emergency bed and coffin by ABC Displays
ABC Displays has created a hospital bed that can be converted into a coffin 

CEO of ABC Displays Rodolfo Gómez told Dezeen the idea came after seeing the dire situation in the neighbouring country of Ecuador. Mortuaries have been overwhelmed and the government had to distribute emergency cardboard coffins as bodies were left on the streets.

"It is a worthy solution so that people are not lying on the floor of hospitals and [they] are not throwing them in mass graves if they die," said Gómez.

"By converting this bed into a coffin, it also allows medical personnel to have biological isolation from the corpses without having to manipulate the corpse much, protecting the medical team," said Gómez.

"The entire procedure is done in the same bed, as in the worst case, the patient's death, it can be converted into a coffin in less than 18 seconds."

As a hospital bed, the cardboard design has slots in the sides for railings and space for brakes, so it can be mounted on wheels.

Emergency bed and coffin by ABC Displays
The team at ABC Displays designed the bed after observing the situation in Ecuador

ABC Displays said they consulted with doctors and hospital staff during prototyping to make sure the bed had the best dimensions for coronavirus patients. Sheets and blankets can be used to cover the cardboard surfaces, just like a normal bed.

Cardboard was chosen for several reasons. According to recent studies, coronavirus can only survive on cardboard surfaces for 24 hours, whereas it lives for two to three days on materials such as wood, metal and plastic.

Each bed can be shipped flat packed, and the corrugated cardboard is light but strong enough to support 150 to 200 kilograms. An average adult weighs just 62 kilograms.

It also minimises the environmental impact, as it can be easily recycled after use – if not used as an emergency burial device.

Emergency bed and coffin by ABC Displays
Each bed is designed to be shipped flat packed

ABC Displays is sending a donation of cardboard beds to Leticia in the Amazon region on the border with Peru and Brazil. Leticia's biggest hospital has only five ventilators, reported the Bogota Post, and no intensive care unit beds. Colombia currently has over 25,300 coronavirus cases and has registered over 800 deaths.

The company will donate beds to the worst affected regions, and is offering to sell them to other local governments in places such as Peru that are looking for inexpensive solutions to bed shortages. ABC Displays estimates it can manufacture 3,000 beds a month if needed.

"The company has all the capacity to export these beds worldwide, considering that there are airlines with the availability to make and carry humanitarian aid," said Gómez.

At the start of the pandemic, Swedish startup Stykka made a cardboard desk that could be used as a cheap solution by people suddenly working from home.

Photography courtesy of ABC Displays.

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Sunday, 31 May 2020

Tracks Architectes creates colonnaded cinema in former French convent

Cinema de Riot by architecture studio Tracks

French studio Tracks Architectes has built a cinema fronted by an irregular arched colonnade in the grounds of a former convent in the town of Riom, central France.

Arcadia Cinema at Riom forms part of the conversion of the Redemptoristine convent into the Jardin de la Culture cultural centre near the historic centre of the town.

Tracks Architectes designed the multi-screen cinema as the first stage of the conversion, which will also include a multimedia library built alongside it and a music school built in the former convent building and an exhibition hall in the chapel.

Cinema de Riot by architecture studio Tracks

The cinema's distinctive facade was informed by a wall broken with seven arches that encloses the former convent and stands next to the cinema.

However, unlike the regular sized arches that break the wall, the arched openings that support the cinema's facade are three different sizes arranged in an irregular pattern. To add to the irregularity the arches turn the corner at the building's edges to create a larger opening.

Cinema de Riot by architecture studio Tracks

"The arches were inspired by the rich history of the site of the convent of the Redemptoristines," explained Moïse Boucherie, partner at Tracks.

"We borrowed this element of architectural vocabulary from existing structures and then gave it a contemporary interpretation," he told Dezeen.

Cinema de Riot by architecture studio Tracks

Tracks Architectes created the sheltered space in front of the building to open up the cinema to the public and the garden that forms part of the cultural centre.

"The design concept was to create a building that was open toward the green spaces of the garden of culture and the existing convent," continued Boucherie.

"Indeed a cinema programme imposes dark rooms and we tried to create a generously open and welcoming space functioning at night as 'light signal'."

Cinema de Riot by architecture studio Tracks

Beyond the colonnade is a large barrel-vault shaped reception hall that leads to three cinema screens and a conference room.

In total, the cinema's have 543 seats, while the conference facility seats 112.

Cinema de Riot by architecture studio Tracks

Paris-based Tracks Architectes is led by partners Boucherie and Jérémy Griffon. The studio previously designed a honey-coloured in the village of village of Perthes-en-Gatinais in France.

Photography is by Guillaume Amat.

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