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Archive for the ‘Creativity’ Category

Extreme Room Service: Space Hotel is Surprisingly Spacious

09 Jan

[ By Delana in Boutique & Art Hotels & Global. ]

space hotel

When you take a vacation, the point is usually to get away from everyday life and do something different. Well, there is nothing quite as different (and no place quite as removed from everyday life) as venturing into space. A Russian company called Orbital Technologies is developing a commercial space station, an orbiting hotel that is 217 miles removed from the surface of Earth.

1 space hotel sleeping pod

2 commercial space station hotel pod

The incredible hotel is not for the budget-conscious traveler; it will cost a bit over US$ 800,000 just to get there, with another US$ 160,000 or so required for five days of accommodations aboard the space station. However, the spacecraft will be designed as a comfortable environment that is much more focused on leisure than the science-oriented International Space Station.

3 commercial space station

4 orbiting space hotel

A trip to Orbital Technologies’ commercial space station will take two days to reach aboard a Soyuz rocket. Experienced space crews will accompany tourists (up to seven at a time) both on the journey from Earth and during their stay in space. Gourmet Earth food – not the bland food tubes astronauts have traditionally been served – will travel in the rocket along with the tourists as well, then be warmed up in on-board microwave ovens just before mealtime.

5 space hotel

6 orbital technologies space hotel

The commercial space station will be equipped with windows, cameras and binoculars so that guests can see the breathtaking neighborhood the space hotel is in. While the project, slated to open in 2016, is mostly geared toward über-wealthy tourists, it is not exclusively a leisure destination. The commercial space station will also serve as an emergency destination for astronauts and cosmonauts aboard the International Space Station if they should ever run into trouble while on a mission.

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Stylish New AK47 Home Storage Solutions Really Pop

09 Jan

[ By Steph in Design & Furniture & Decor. ]

AK47 Home Collection 1

Unconventional solutions for home storage by Italian company AK47 make a bold, graphic statement on the wall or ceiling, turning everyday items like clothing, firewood, magazines and even food into decor. The 2012 home collection includes round wall-mounted shelves in black and white, a low coffee table with built-in storage and wall-mounted clothes hangers that can be arranged in artistic configurations.

AK47 Home Collection 2

AK47 Home Collection 3

AK47 Home Collection 4

Flouting the tired convention of storing books and other items in vertical stacks, the Tubola storage system creates little wall cubbies that keep items up off the ground, and put them on display in individual groups. Available in a range of sizes, the shelves can be mounted like wall art.

AK47 Home Collection 5

The Zerino coffee table features a center cutout that can hold the object of your choice, whether a plant, candles or a miniature fire pit. The space between the two discs offers room for storage.

AK47 Home Collection 6

AK47 Home Collection 7

The Bretell magazine rack puts your collection front-and-center, while the Tac wall-mounted clothes hanger brings your clothes and accessories out of the closet.

AK47 Home Collection 8

Have a lot to hang? The Gang ceiling-mounted chain hanger can fit a lot of clothing into one small space, and would also look great covered in plants.

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[ By Steph in Design & Furniture & Decor. ]

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Your Text Here: Messages of Light Displayed on Buildings

08 Jan

[ By Steph in Art & Street Art & Graffiti. ]

Your Text Here Projection Bombing Urban Art

City dwellers are bombarded each day with the demands of advertisers, government, media and other groups that dominate communication, and their own voices can be lost in the din. Signs, images and symbols confront us on every possible surface with messages that tell us what to do and how to think. YOUR TEXT HERE, an installation by artist Marcos Zotes, flips that dynamic, displaying the words of citizens in bold type on the sides of buildings.

Your Text Here Projection Bombing Urban Art 2

YOUR TEXT HERE is an urban light art installation that projects short messages from participants onto buildings, allowing them to broadcast their thoughts and feelings back to the city. Users enter their messages through a website on their mobile phones, enabling their voices to be heard while remaining anonymous.

Your Text Here Projection Bombing Light Art 4

More than 1,000 anonymous messages were projected for 10 to 20 seconds each during DLECTRICITY, an outdoors light art festival that took place in midtown Detroit in October 2012.

Your Text Here Projection Bombing Urban Art 3

While this particular project was approved by local officials, ‘projection bombing‘ is often done guerrilla-style. Because it’s temporary and the source of the light can be hard to pinpoint, it offers a relatively easy way to get messages across to a large number of people without fear of getting in trouble with the authorities. This technique was used by activist Mike Read during the peak of Occupy Wall Street to display messages like “Look around, you are a part of a global uprising.”

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7 Abandoned Wonders of Commercial & Industrial Architecture

07 Jan

[ By Steph in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]

Abandoned Commercial buildings main

These castle-like structures, skeletal high-rises and rusting remains of the golden age of industry are monuments to themselves, still standing despite decades of neglect. Formerly factories, offices, corporate headquarters and industrial facilities, these 7 commercial and industrial sites contain clues to their former purposes among all the rubble, overgrown greenery, peeling paint and other effects of abandonment.

Abandoned High-Rises and Factories of Detroit, Michigan

Abandoned Detroit Factories Skyscrapers Buildings

Abandoned Detroit Mills Factories

Abandoned Detroit Factory

(images via: bob jagendorf, meeshypants, nitram242, davescaglione, joguldi 1 + 2)

When it comes to Detroit, how can you choose just one standout abandonment? The city is, in and of itself, a jaw-dropping wonder of architectural decay. Once it lost its identity as a manufacturing mecca, Detroit also lost a large number of its residents, leaving block after block abandoned, with few signs of life in between. Once the fourth-largest city in the United States, Detroit is now filled with towering structures that have been left as they were when last used, often full of the ephemera of life. These include a number of high-rises – the most notable being Michigan Grand Terminal, pictured above with an overgrown lawn – and burned-out factories.

In 1950, Detroit had a population of nearly two million; today, while similar cities have grown exponentially, this one is down to less than 900,000. The fact that the city has become something of an urban Wild West doesn’t exactly encourage new residents to purchase decrepit properties and return them to their former glory. The number of abandoned buildings standing in the city currently numbers around 70,000.

Bethlehem Steel Factory, Pennsylvania

Abandoned Bethlehem Factory

Abandoned Places Bethlehem Steel Factory 1

Abandoned Bethlehem Steel Factory 2

(images via: bob jagendorf, a.strakey, dandeluca, the seafarer, dave scaglione)

Once the second-largest steel producer in the United States, Bethlehem Steel began work on a large facility in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania in the 1860s that was at the forefront of manufacturing innovation at the time. Its towering facilities made it a symbol of the industrialized future of America. During World Wars I and II, it was a major supplier of armor plate to the U.S. Armed Forces, making components of weapons like large-caliber guns. But by the 1990s, America’s steel industry began to decline, and companies like this could no longer compete with cheap foreign labor.

When Bethlehem Steel closed its local operations, it laid out a plan for its 163-acre site for cultural, recreational, educational, entertainment and retail development, to reduce economic impacts on a city that had long relied on steel manufacturing for prosperity. However, the company went out of business and the land was sold to a developer that has turned it into a casino. Ironically, the casino had difficulty coming up with the 16,000 tons of steel needed to build its new $ 600 million complex, so it only finished one building. Some of Bethlehem Steel’s old manufacturing structures were demolished, but furnaces and gas blowing engine house still stand.

Hasard Cheratte Abandoned Coal Mine, Belgium

Abandoned Hasard Cheratte Coal Mine 1

Abandoned Hasard Cheratte Coal Mine 2

(images via: wikimedia commons, intermayer 1 + 2)

One of the most popular abandoned sites in Europe among urban explorers, the Hasard Cheratte Coal Mine in Belgium looks a bit like a crumbling castle. The facility dates to the 1860s, and was formerly one of many such mines in the coal basin of Liege. Make your way inside and you’ll find the hulking remains of industrial equipment and heavy mining machinery and lots of long, dark brick-lined passageways. Abandoned since 1977 and now a protected heritage site, the complex still contains such small items as books and work gloves. The largest ‘castle tower’ sits over the deepest mine shaft at the facility, which plunges a mind-boggling 1,574 feet into the ground. See photos of the interior at 28 Days Later.

Abandoned Chemical Factory, Poland

Abandoned Chemical Factory Poland 1

Abandoned Chemical Factory Poland 2

(images via: mlociny)

You probably don’t want to go inside this complex. The abandoned fluorescent light factory in Warsaw, Poland once manufactured mercury lamps; it was in the midst of renovation when astronomic mercury contamination levels put its modernization to a halt. Pools of mercury had collected under the floors, poisoning many workers. The factory was also occupied by the Nazis during World War II and used to produce transceiver equipment for submarines, tanks, and aircraft. During the Warsaw Uprising in 1944, Polish insurgents took it back.

As dangerous as it is, urban explorers have still made their way inside to photograph the peeling paint, rusted fixtures, rotting wood and broken glass. Documents, blueprints and bottles still full of chemicals are still scattered all over the building’s ten floors and basement level. The more valuable items, like toilets and sinks, are long gone.

Szkieletor Tower, Poland

Abandoned Skyscraper Szkieletor

(images via: joannaj, wikimedia commons)

Named after the He-Man villain Skeletor for its skeletal and arguably sort of evil appearance, Szkieletor Tower in Krakow, Poland has stood like a bleak lookout over the city since 1981. Construction began in 1975 on what was supposed to be the regional office of the Main Technical Organization, but halted six years later due to economic constraints, political unrest and the imposition of martial law in Poland. This history combined with its looks give Szkieletor an ominous feel. Though little more than a shell, it remains the tallest building in the city at 24 stories.

This tower was supposed to have a twin, and together they would have acted as a gateway to a skyscraper district in Krakow known as ‘Polish Manhattan.’ The original deadline for the entire project of Polish skyscrapers was 2005, but hopes for its future glory faded in the 1980s. Passing from one owner to the next, the building never seems to get past planning stages for renovation. A 2010 plan to turn it into a hotel has fallen flat. Instead, the building remains covered in massive billboards, a ham-fisted attempt to improve its looks and capitalize on its continued existence.

Warehouse B, Brussels, Belgium

Abandoned Warehouse B Brussels

Abandoned Warehouse B Brussels 2

(images via: abandoned-places.com)

Known locally as ‘The Prison’, Brussels’ Warehouse B is just one part of a sprawling multi-purpose transport center that was built in the early 20th century to house the Customs Administration, a railway station and a number of companies trading goods like tobacco, wine and beer. While some of these buildings are still maintained and occupied, Warehouse B has remained empty despite its beauty and historical worth. Serving as a warehouse for customs, the brick and stone building was used until 1987 for Customs storage, including confiscated goods.

The looks of the interior, including courtyards, metal security grates and many small, dark rooms, made it look a bit like a prison – so perhaps it’s no surprise that it was temporary used for this purpose by the Germans during World War II.

The Domes, Casa Grande, Arizona

Abandoned Domes 1

Abandoned Domes 2

Today, ‘The Domes’ of Casa Grande, Arizona look like the remains of some sort of sci-fi movie set. Any one of these round buildings could suddenly lift off the ground and zoom away into the atmosphere like a UFO. Built for computer manufacturing in the early 1980s for a facility that was never completed, they’ve just sort of been left to rot in the desert. InnerConn planned to build circuit boards here, and spent about $ 150,000 on each of the polyurethane and concrete domes. The idea was that they’d be more insulated in the desert climate, leading to lower maintenance costs.

According to local wisdom, you just shouldn’t go out there – cue obligatory whispers about ghosts and Satanic rituals – but judging by all the graffiti, many people go anyway. Many of the ceilings are falling in, and The Domes were an illegal dump site for years, making them a pretty dangerous site.

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Penny Wise: 12 Cool Copper-Clad Buildings

06 Jan

[ By Steve in Architecture & Cities & Urbanism. ]

copper_clad_main
Copper’s fiery glow, relative abundance and famed durability have served civilization well for countless centuries. The metal‘s many attributes have also endeared it to architects of all ages, from all ages. Now a new breed of urban designers have warmed to copper‘s practical beauty, employing it to clad buildings of all sizes and why not: it doesn’t just make cents.

//hapo Museum – Tshwane, South Africa

copper-clad //hapo(images via: Phaidon and Freedom Park)

The //hapo Museum (“//hapo” means “hope” or “dream” in the Khoi language) was designed by GAPP, Mashabane Rose Architects and MMA to showcase over 3 billion years of South African history. The 11,000-square-meter (118,405 sq ft) building complex is clad with custom-made copper panels that are meant to age naturally, displaying a rich patina in response to the effects of sun, wind and weather.

copper-clad //hapo(images via: ZArchitecture and Inhabitat)

As the centerpiece of the Freedom Park located in Tshwane, near Pretoria, the //hapo Museum’s core design concept is meant to echo that of a traditional healer’s garden with faux rock outcrops enclosing story-telling areas. “With walls and roof all clad in copper sheeting,” state the architects, “the ‘outcrop’ will, with time, rust to green and merge with the natural landscape.”

Fujitsubo Beauty Parlor – Tokyo, Japan

copper-clad fujitsubo tokyo(images via: The Motor, Architizer and Dezeen)

Should not a beauty parlor itself be beautiful? Call it an exercise in zen philosophy if you like but the Fujitsubo (“barnacle” in Japanese) beauty parlor in Tokyo’s trendy Omotesando district is gorgeous any way you slice it. Credit Japanese architects Archivision Hirotani Studio with this exciting example of copper cladding applied continuously from rooftop to ground level.

copper-clad fujitsubo tokyo(image via: Designboom)

Copper sheeting laid in an overlapping shingle pattern climbs the parlor’s triple-pyramid roof in horizontal layers while the vertical walls show off the traditional staggered brickwork design to best advantage. Bright and reflective when applied, the copper is expected to age incrementally to degrees dependent upon the varying amounts of sunlight and rain received at different areas of the structure.

Evesham Leisure Centre – Worcestershire, England

copper-clad Evesham Leisure Centre UK(images via: Wychavon and Leisure Property)

The Evesham Leisure Centre in Worcestershire, England, was designed by Limbrick Limited: Architecture and Design (now part of Roberts – Limbrick Architects) and opened in late 2009. The complex features two swimming pools, a climbing wall, a 100-station fitness room and a beauty salon but it was the building’s striking sea-green copper-clad exterior that garnered it the Vale of Evesham Civic Society’s Merit Award for 2011.Browse our partner-sponsored Glasses, with a variety of options to suit every taste and budget, available to buy online

copper-clad Evesham Leisure Centre UK(image via: TECU Consulting UK)

In keeping with Evesham’s long, intimate and occasionally tempestuous relationship with the River Avon which runs through (and occasionally into) the town, the architects chose to apply pre-patinated copper cladding to portions of the building so that its final tinting would be set from the start. As copper is the longest-lasting exterior construction component in use today, the decision to “go green” from the get-go is perfectly understandable.

Waipolu Gallery and Studio – Oahu, Hawaii

copper-clad Waipolu Gallery Hawaii(images via: Architype Review and PCS)

Completed in 2010, the Waipolu Gallery on the Hawaiian island of Oahu was designed by Peter Bohlin of Bohlin Cywinski Jackson, with “Dirty Penny™” copper cladding provided by Zahner of Kansas City. Stately, subdued but possessed of an ageless solidity, the structure appears as if it grew naturally out of the island’s primordial volcanic substrate.

copper-clad Waipolu Gallery Hawaii(image via: Zahner)

By installing pre-patinated copper, the Waipolu Gallery gets a jump start on the long road to antique verdigris while in the meantime, shows respect for the serious and subdued tone required by a facility of the Waipolu Gallery’s reputation.

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6 Popcorn-Spilling, Oscar-Worthy Themed Home Theaters

04 Jan

[ By Marc in Design & Fixtures & Interiors. ]

Themed-Home-Theaters

Theme parks are fun because of the rides, yes, but a lot of the joy comes from the atmosphere. Theme parks are designed like movie sets, and it feels like one has stepped into a different world. Wouldn’t it be great if that feeling could be brought home? It can be. Creating a themed home theater is increasingly popular with those that have the money, or the obsession, to make it worthwhile.

Pirate Themed Home Theater

Pirate-Themed-Home-Theater

(Images via elitehometheaterseating)

Elite Home Theater Seating is one of the strongest voices in the themed home theater business. This particular offering is a pirate themed project that showcases their skills to great affect. These theaters are incredibly detail oriented, with a star studded sky completing the illusion of being on an open air ship on the high seas.

Egyptian Tomb Theater

Egyptian-Themed-Home-Theater

(Images via avsforum)

Florida-based AVS Forum contributor Venomnusss shared his incredibly detailed Egyptian tomb-themed home theater. According to his description, the theater took 1.5 years to complete, which isn’t surprising considering the incredible detail. Symmetric sides encase a large U-shaped couch that can seat the entire family, whether it’s time for the next episode of a TV show, or a thrilling film.

Star Trek Movie Theater

Star-Trek-Themed-Home-Theater

(Images via escusa)

Electronics masters ESC designed and implemented this intense Star Trek themed theater for a private homeowner. With an incredible amount of detail (apparent to any fans of the show) and a difficult set up, ESC pulled out all the stops, including motorized doors and concert-type lighting.

Batman Themed Home Theater

Batman-Themed-Home-Theater

(Images via elitehometheaterseating)

Elite Home Theater Seating pulled out the stops again, with this private Batman themed batcave theater. Besides the ceiling that looks like a true cave, the coolest touch has to be the sliding bookshelves that reveal the newest version of the batmobile. Command screens in the back of the home theater are the perfect tools for Alfred to monitor Batman and act as support.

Star Wars Theater

Star-Wars-Themed-Home-Theater

(Images via modernhometheater)

Modern Home Theater shares the details of this Star Wars themed home theater designed to look like the command deck of the Death Star from the films. The theater is owned by a couple living outside of Seattle, who included three rows of seating to ensure that everyone can join in their movie marathons.

Stargate Atlantis Home Theater

Stargate-Themed-Home-Theater

(Images via electronichouse, oobject)

Fans of the science fiction television series Stargate Atlantis will immediately recognize the design choices in this home theater. Electronic House outlines the details of this $ 70,000 home theater. Creating the intricate lighting alone must have been a complex endeavor, not to mention the detailed design work and the incredible circular screen that accurately depicts the Stargate.

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Resource Furniture: Convertible Designs for Small Spaces

04 Jan

[ By Steph in Design & Furniture & Decor. ]

Space Saving Convertible Furniture Main

When living in a small space, every inch counts – so multifunctional furniture that can adapt and change is a top priority. A coffee table needs to be more than a coffee table, possibly rising to offer work space when sitting on the couch or to become a dining surface. A bed platform could fold flat against the wall, or even turn into a desk. Resource Furniture offers streamlined solutions that maximize space in a variety of ways, so your furniture can be tailored to your individual lifestyle.

Space Saving Transforming Tables

What might look like an ordinary table is actually hiding a few surprises. If you only need a dining table or work desk for an hour or two out of the day, why have a separate one that just takes up valuable space?

Space Saving Transforming Bed 1

Space Saving Transforming Bed 2

An ideal solution for combination office/guest rooms, transforming beds hide away against the wall when not in use, while the desk surface slides up out of the way at night.

Space Saving Transforming Bunk Beds

Large, flat cabinets open to reveal not one, but two sleep surfaces. Resource Furniture’s convertible hideaway bunk beds include built-in storage and desks.

Space Saving Transforming Chair Bookcase

Space Saving Transforming Chair Stepladder

No room for a reading nook? A comfy chair for lounging and taking in a good book doubles as a bookcase. Another chair turns over to become a stepladder.

Space Saving All in One Office 1

Space Saving All in One Office 2

All-in-one furniture systems that barely take up any floor room when closed can hide all sorts of functions in the smallest possible space. This home office is just 13 3/4 inches deep, but includes shelving that can accommodate a printer and a PC tower, as well as a large desk surface, built-in lighting and storage space.

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Architecture Meets Fashion: Shoes by Hadid, Gehry & More

03 Jan

[ By Steph in Design & Products & Packaging. ]

Architect Shoes Main

How would the architectural styles of Zaha Hadid, Frank Gehry and Santiago Calatrava translate to shoes? As these 6 collaborations prove, sometimes the results are just as you’d imagine, and sometimes they’re completely unexpected. These architect-designed and inspired shoes range from the practical and wearable to sculptural art objects.

Zaha Hadid for Melissa

Architect Shoes Hadid Melissa

Brazilian brand Melissa offered the ideal medium with which architect Zaha Hadid could indulge her creativity: moulded plastic, which makes it easy to create shapes that can’t really be achieved with more traditional shoemaking materials. Says Hadid, “The design engages with the ?uid organic contours of the body. The shoes asymmetric quality conveys an inherent sense of move-ment to the design, evoking continuous transformation. The concept addresses the perception of wearing the shoe in motion rather than a static display on a shopping window.”

Frank Gehry for J.M. Weston

Architect Shoes Frank Gehry

Would you ever imagine that shoes designed by Frank Gehry would be so… conventional? The architect known for flashy, amorphous metallic structures designed these six-buttoned black-and-white leather boots for the 2009 collection of shoe company J.M. Weston.  “You shouldn’t have to differentiate between disciplines, shoes are very architectural and always have been, and even more recently there are new shoes… (that are) buildings.”

Zaha Hadid for Lacoste

Architect Shoes Hadid Lacoste

Zaha Hadid designed a series of limited edition shoes available in quantities of just 1,000. According to Hadid, the shoes were designed “utilizing dynamic fluid grids, which when wrapped around the foot, expand and contract to negotiate the body ergonomically – creating a unique undulating and radiating landscape, ultimately translated to shoes in fine calf leather.”

Julian Hakes for Mojito

Architect Shoes Julian Hakes

Architect Shoes Julian Hakes 2

The Mojito shoe by architect Julian Hakes wraps around the foot in a continuous ribbon, and lacks the footplate that one might say is the most essential part of the shoe. As with most of these creations, however, Hakes’ design is more about form than function.

Rem D. Koolhaas for United Nude

Architect Shoes Rem Koolhaas

The nephew of famed architect Rem Koolhaas, and an architect himself, Rem D. Koolhaas teamed up with British shoemaker Galahad Clark to create a line of architectural shoes for their brand United Nude. United Nude designs has also been inspired by other art forms, like furniture – they have a shoe that honors designers Charles and Ray Eames.

Santiago Calatrava-Inspired Shoes by Tea Petrovic

Architect Shoes Calatrava

The architecture of Santiago Calatrava is captured flawlessly in a series of cutting-edge shoes by Tea Petrovic  for a project at the Academy of Fine Arts in Sarajevo. “I have created a shoe collection, as my graduating project, that is centered around the idea that each shoe is an sculptural-architectural structured form. To underline their sculptural form, the shoes are kept white, which on the other hand emphasis the artistic language, present in the entire collection.”

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Tidying Up Art: Messy Masterpieces Made Neat & Clean

03 Jan

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

The Swiss are known for leading an orderly existence, so you can imagine their frustration at grandiose works of German art and the excesses of their French neighbors as well.

Ursus Wehrli is fighting back, organizing everything from parking lots and pine branches to alphabet soup and classic artworks of masters present and past, collected in a series of (humorous but thought-provoking) books about cleaning up all aspects of life.

No one is safe from his exacting eye, precise brushstrokes and poignant photography as he sweeps a Van Gogh bedroom scene out of sight in one stroke and crushes a Postmodern Campbell’s soup can in the next. Jackson Pollock, beware!

 

Not even childrens’ sandboxes or Chinese signs are safe from this process of global reorganization – but while some things gain order from the process, others (like letters) lose meaning and devolve into absurdity. Even the stars themselves are in reach.

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Touchy Instrument Turns Literal Beets Into Figurative Beats

02 Jan

[ By Delana in Gadgets & Geekery & Technology. ]

beetbox

The BeetBox from designer Scott Garner explores user expectations and creates a delightful visual pun. Its wooden enclosure holds six actual beets that, when touched by human hands, create actual beats.

beetbox musical vegetables

Garner’s BeetBox consists of a poplar frame housing a few simple electronic components, a half dozen fresh beets, and a capacitive touch sensor. When someone touches one of the beets, a unique sound emanates from the audio amplifier.

Touching a number of the beets in sequence creates a totally fresh mix. Users are limited only by the number of hands they have available for tapping the vegetables.

beet box

The designer’s goal was to create a unique user experience in which the electronics are invisible – both physically and in terms of the interaction being very simple.

musical vegetables beetbox

He accomplished this goal quite neatly with the BeetBox, turning beets into beats and allowing even those without any musical experience to create their own totally personal music.

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