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Osram Opto Semiconductor’s tile-size OLED modules (above inset). Ingo Mauer’s one-of-a-kind Flying Future pendant (top), and his limited edition Early Future table luminaire (above).

August 2008

Ingo Mauer and Osram ally for a visionary OLED
Celebrated for his avant-garde approach to illumination, Munich-based lighting designer Ingo Mauer was tapped by Osram Opto Semiconductors to develop an actual fixture using the company’s pioneering OLED (organic light-emitting diode) technology. The raison d’être: to realize OLED’s full potential as a decorative design element and functional source of light.

Typically found in small displays, such as those on cell phones, OLEDs differ from LEDs in that they are not a series of light points, but a uniform light-generating surface. Mauer, a proponent of the exposed technique in his designs, embraced OLEDs, which are well suited to this stylistic approach. The collaboration resulted in a limited edition table luminaire and one-of-a-kind pendant, dubbed Early Future and Flying Future, respectively, which flaunt the inherent characteristics of the individual tile-size OLED modules in dynamic configurations. Encased in sealed glass, each is rotatable within its metal framework. “In the off state, they are highly reflective,” says Maurer. When on, they assume what he describes as a watercolor, or “aquarelle” effect, imparting a soft white light that is warm but not too warm. Of the collaboration, Maurer notes, “We play the creative part, but can only talk about what we could do. It is really all about the technology.” Ingo Maurer GmbH, Munich, Germany.
www.ingo-maurer.com

[Reader Service: August 2008 #207]

 






The Axor Citterio M Collection overhead shower with wall plate (top); single-lever tall washbasin faucet (middle inset); complete shower system (middle); 4-hole Roman tub set and bath tub with shelf (above); and wall-mounted single-handle faucet with base plate (above inset).

July 2008

Antonio Citterio’s urbane economy of scale for Axor
In a series of diary entries entitled “Precious Moments,” humorist David Sedaris recalls staying at London’s The Hempel Hotel, where Minimalist closets and an unergonomic toilet earned his disdain. Italian architect and designer Antonio Citterio may also have stayed at some Hempels. His new series of 50 bath fittings for Hansgrohe’s Axor brand, called Citterio M (for Milan), was designed with a scrutable hospitality experience in mind.

The project began in 2005, Citterio says, about the time he started accepting a spate of hotel commissions.

“I wanted to do something that was quick to understand,” he continues. “When you go into a hotel room, you have to know immediately how to use the bath. I started with this idea of simplicity.”

Citterio M is the designer’s second group for Axor. His first, an eponymous 2003 collection, is muscular, with broad surfaces and juxtapositions of orthogonal and curved corners. Citterio M is slender, attenuated, soft to the touch, and effortless to maneuver. Between them, Citterio says, “We cover all the needs of people in interior design and architecture: Sometimes you want an object to be seen, sometimes it must integrate.” And while Citterio M may be less a showstopper, the reduced dimensions of the single-lever faucet with its diagonally offset handle allowed the designer to achieve clarity without commonness. This faucet’s spout tapers so it seems almost impossible for water to flow through it—signifying the “fragility” of water—and the smallest-ever ceramic cartridge was developed for it. The showerhead features water-saving air-injection technology that mimics pouring rain and projects asymmetrically from its spout for delicate, two-finger adjustments. Axor brand manager Philippe Grohe summarizes these moves, saying that Citterio elevates water to preciousness. Yet, despite its treatment of water as liquid gold, Citterio M retails for approximately half the price of Axor Citterio. Hansgrohe, Alpharetta, Ga. www.axor-design.com

[Reader Service: July 2008 #207]



The Flanigan pattern (top). The Kenyan pattern with shadows cast from artificial (above left) and natural light (above right).

February 2008

Copper panels filter light while treading lightly
According to Uriah Bueller, owner/artist of the Boulder, Colorado–based metal-artwork studio UB Arts, the national launch of his company’s Parasoleil copper shade and privacy panels at last October’s ASLA conference in San Francisco not only received an overwhelming response from attendees but sparked ideas for new applications, such as replacement for glass in cabinet doors. Bueller, who has designed furniture, fountains, and custom architectural metalwork pieces for residential and commercial projects, started Parasoleil in 2006 after creating a copper sunshade canopy for a residence in Boulder. With a varied background in psychology, art, and world cultures/religions, Bueller finds inspiration for his designs from student trips he arranges (as a side business) to countries like Kenya, Thailand, and Fiji. Completely mined, milled, and manufactured in the U.S. to limit transportation energy waste, the shades and privacy panels, made from 90–95 percent recycled copper and 100 percent recyclable, do not require maintenance. Available in five standard patterns, the panels weigh 15–18 pounds each after they are cut. A waterjet cutting process allows all of the excess copper to be reused. The 36'' x 96'' finished panels currently list at $369 wholesale. Parasoleil, Boulder, Colo. www.parasoleil.com

[Reader Service: February 2008 #200]

January 2008

Office desk takes multitasking to the extreme
Five years ago, Details, a subsidiary of the office-furniture manufacturer Steelcase, introduced a height-adjustable desk that allows people to stand while they work. Taking the concept a step further, the company recently unveiled the Walkstation, a height-adjustable desk connected to a treadmill. Office employees can now conduct meetings or peck away on their keyboards while using a specially designed treadmill that tops out at 2 miles per hour. The goal, says Details president Bud Klipa, is not to replace a trip to the gym, but to promote movement in the sedentary office environment, in turn creating a healthier workforce.

The company developed the product in collaboration with the Mayo Clinic’s Dr. James Levine, who studies energy expended during routine daily activities. The curved desk comes in five different sizes, with a height-adjustment range of 241¼4'' to 52''. Priced at about $4,000, it is only available commercially. The treadmill plugs in to a standard 110-volt outlet and features a noise-reducing belt, a high-torque motor designed for low speeds over long durations, a safety key, and a console that displays pace, time, distance, and calories burned. Klipa says first-time users are often surprised they can work while walking. “People tend to look at it and scratch their heads at first,” he says. “There really isn’t anything else like it on the market.” Details, A Steelcase Company, Grand Rapids, Mich.
www.details-worktools.com

[Reader Service: January 2008 #200]

July 2007

Patterned fences make good neighborhoods
Without sacrificing function for ornament, Lace Fence is a refreshing take on the ubiquitous chain-link fence. Designed by the young Dutch firm Demakersvan and produced by IDFence in Bangalore, India, the craftily patterned fencing has sparked interest with art gallery owners, retailers, and architecture firms. Designer Joep Verhoeven was first inspired by a makeshift fence-mending job he noticed in his travels. “The question that followed became the source for the concept,” he says. “What if you would direct the wire into a more decorative pattern?” The patterns are produced by hand for indoor or outdoor use with the same wire as machine-made industrial chain-link mesh. Designs can be created to help discourage climbers, hide or enhance surroundings, deal with harsh weather, or create a custom look. The company currently produces a minimum of 2,700 square feet of fencing per month in costs ranging from $17 to $30 per square foot. Demakersvan, Rotterdam. www.demakersvan.com

[Reader Service: July 2007 #200]


Clockwise from left: Glacier Ice is a solid white translucent material; the Opale fixture from Ivalo Lighting demonstrates the design potential of Glacier Ice; Artic Ice will offer the same translucency, but with a particulate design.

June 2007

Translucent solid surfacing material comes to light
Two new translucent colors from DuPont Corian, Glacier Ice and Artic Ice, allow up to three times as much light to pass through than other Corian colors. The new materials were previewed at the AIA show held last month in San Antonio. Also on display at the show was Opale, a new lighting fixture from Ivalo Lighting that uses Glacier Ice for the body of the fixture. Designed by Ali Rahim and Hina Jamelle of Contemporary Architecture Practice in New York City [record, Design Vanguard, January 2004, page 136], Opale is illuminated by a single 39-watt HID lamp. “[Corian] employed a vacuum-form technique which allows the overall form to be continuous and read as completely seamless,” says Jamelle. “They were also fantastic in developing new techniques for the tooling of grooved thicknesses in a complex shape.” Glacier Ice, a solid, translucent color, will be available this Summer. Artic Ice, made with white particulates, will be available on a limited basis in the fall. DuPont Corian, Wilmington, Del. www.corian.com

[Reader Service: June 2007 #200]


Clockwise from top: The base is designed to be the right weight to balance the lamp; the designers rearranged the lamp’s circuit board in order to emphasize the flatness of LEDs; the body of the lamp is both flexible and rigid.

May 2007

Mixing it up to keep an LED reading lamp slim
Milan-based engineer Alberto Meda and architect Paolo Rizzatto took a new approach to the traditional look of the electronic circuit board while designing the Mix reading lamp for Luceplan. “We tried to change the distribution of the components, as in urban planning,” says Meda, who is based in Milan along with Rizzatto. “In the end we had a circuit that looked like a garden city.” To get the minimum thickness required for the design, they moved condensers and memory files toward the back “as if they were skyscrapers,” leaving more space on the circuit board for logic-based devices, which appear “like single-family homes.” This new arrangement allows for an ultra-slim head that houses the LEDs, a control lens, a heat sink, and a rotating filter that regulates color temperature. A graceful base holds a rigid conical tube and an attached flexible neck without “breaking the continuity of the cable,” says Meda. Available in a table and wall version, Mix offers low energy consumption and a 50,000 hour life. When it’s off, the lamp continues to make a statement, as its head softly glows with blue light. Luceplan USA, New York City. www.luceplanusa.com

[Reader Service: May 2007 #200]


Clockwise from top left: A drawing illustrates the oven’s ventilation and air-extraction slots, which must remain free from obstruction; the oven descended to counter height; halogen lighting provides a view of the interior.

April 2007

A wall-mounted oven that offers counter service
With the touch of a button, Gaggenau’s 24-inch Lift Oven’s glass ceramic base lowers directly from the oven to the countertop, where meals can be loaded and then raised into the cooking cavity. According to the manufacturer, this new approach results in minimal energy loss as the heat remains in the upper cavity when it is opened. The design may also aid users who have limited strength or mobility as access from three sides eliminates the need to reach into a hot oven. The stainless-steel-tinted glass front oven can either be hung on a wall or built into hanging cabinetry. Features include halogen lighting, 11 heating methods, automatic temperature recommendation, and precise electronic temperature control. An added bonus for cooks: Items such as bread and pizza can be cooked directly on the glass ceramic base, and a pyrolytic self-cleaning program burns off any residues left behind. Gaggenau, Huntington Beach, Calif. www.gaggenau-usa.com

[Reader Service: April 2007 #200]

Archival photographs from the Fred Trump apartment lobby (top right) and Lapidus’s Miami Beach apartment (top left) show the original Lapidus pieces that inspired the armless Alton Chair (above middle), the S-shaped Ocean Bench (above right), and the acrylic-armed Island Sofa (above left).
February 2007

Back for an encore: The Morris Lapidus collection
While Morris Lapidus, Miami’s spectacular and much-criticized postwar architect, did not have the opportunity to put his furniture designs into large-scale production during his lifetime, a new collection based on archival photography of his projects debuted during the Art Basel Miami Beach art show held in December. Created in a partnership between Dennis Miller Associates and Lapidus collaborator and license-holder Deborah Desilets, the five designs are intended to evoke his spirit while remaining versatile enough for both residential and commercial interiors. The collection includes three chairs, an acrylic-armed sofa, and a sinuous bench based on pieces designed for the Eden Roc (1955) and Sans Souci (1949) hotels, a Fred Trump apartment building lobby (1948), and Lapidus’s own Miami Beach apartment (1963). Dennis Miller Associates, New York City. www.dennismiller.com

[Reader Service: February 2007 #200]


Clockwise from top left: Prototypes of the chair design. The Aula Magistral is one of four main theaters in the complex. Each chair is connected to the theater’s lighting system and can be used as emergency lighting..

January 2007

Glowing theater seating sets the stage for drama
Poltrona Frau, known for leather-upholstered furnishings and car interiors, collaborated with Santiago Calatrava to develop an illuminated seating system designed exclusively for the four large theaters and small rehearsal space of his Palau de les Arts Reina Sofia, the opera house in Valencia which officially launched its first season in October 2006. Working from sketches by the Valencia-born Calatrava, Poltrona Frau produced and installed 4,219 seats in four colors, with different inclinations, heights, and widths, according to a long visibility study carried out by the company. Made of wood, leather, and glazed crystal, each chair is illuminated by a thin, electroluminescent light source and controlled by a specially designed software program. Depending on the desired atmosphere for the production, the chairs can be illuminated from 50 to 150 volts, giving the audience a feeling of floating in the dark—a scenic effect strongly desired by the architect. Poltrona Frau, New York City. www.poltronafrau.com

[Reader Service: January 2007 #200]

 
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Clockwise from top left: The Enigma 825 model features seven shades that reflect light from a hidden source. Volcano is encased in a conical, clear polycarbonate shade. Collage, shown here in Heavenly Blue, projects shadows on itself.

November 2006

Fixtures that illuminate in a variety of brilliant ways
For more than 70 years, Louis Poulsen has pushed the boundary between art objects and functional lights, and its latest U.S. introductions from an international roster of designers continues that legacy. Enigma, a direct/indirect pendant by Tokyo-based Shoichi Uchiyama, provides glare-free lighting with graduated matte acrylic shades. Hair-thin aircraft cables give the shades the illusion of floating, while the light source is completely hidden within an aluminum cone. Volcano, by London-based David Morgan Associates, is made with a vacuum-formed clear polycarbonate shade. Light emanates from the center of the 1½-foot-high floor light, striking the reflector and spreading along the bottom portion of the luminaire. Danish designer Louis Campbell tried to replicate the way sun shines through leaves with the Collage pendant, constructed of three pieces of laser-cut, glossy extruded acrylic. Louis Poulsen Lighting, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. www.louispoulsen.com

[Reader Service: November 2006 #200]


The dome features a round skylight (above left) that lets in both light and rain. The lotus flower rain catcher sits under the oculus, with the moon screen behind it (above right). The observatory (top) stands on four pillars and is constructed without mortar..

October 2006

East meets West in a modular stone observatory
Described by the Prism Stone in Architecture Awards jury as “a wonderful garden folly that proves simplicity can be satisfying,” the Rain Catcher observatory was presented with a Prism Award of Merit at this year’s Coverings trade show. Designed by Tarik Currimbhoy of Currimbhoy & Co., in New York City, and handcrafted by its affiliate Sana Stone, Rain Catcher faces west on the highest point of a residence in Ghent, New York. “It’s poetry in stone”, says Currimbhoy. “We want to bring stone back into the American vocabulary.” Made of yellow limestone, the 20,000-pound modular structure was fabricated in India and transported in sections, with interlocking pieces assembled on-site. Built without mortar (copper pins were used for additional security), the collar of the dome works as a keystone, locking the dome into place. Set along the cardinal points of the compass, the structure is rich with details: A central oculus pierces the dome and lets in light and weather; hand-carved screens support the benches and show the phases of the moon; and a carved lotus flower on the floor is both the eponymous rain catcher and also functions as a compass. Sana Stone, New York City. www.sanastone.com

[Reader Service: October 2006 #200]

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