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Posts Tagged ‘Pair’

Topographic Interiors: Pair of Stacked Plywood Storefronts

02 Feb

[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Fixtures & Interiors. ]

wood storefront

This set of two spaces in Osaka, an information hub and public cafe, each employs layers of horizontal wooden sheets that stack up vertically to form seating, shelves, standing desks and work surfaces.

wood plywood design japan

Japanese architect Kengo Kuma worked with their client, a regional restaurant guide requiring a physical presence in a space open to the public, to shape both essential elements and opportunities for unexpected interactions.

wood interior custom space

wood layered ply seating

Alternating layers of recessed and black-edged boards create a heightened contrast with their bright, naturally wood-colored counterparts sticking further out from the walls.

wood layered desk shelves

wood separated storefront japan

Both rooms are set in the bottom of the same structure but are separated by outdoor space, so their common (and unusual) material language helps them connect across the void.

wood layered exterior view

wood custom casework system

By using light colors and through bright illumination, people passing between the rooms are meant to find them surprising, distracting and engaging. The composition was made, in part, to draw in pedestrians on their way through the central passage that bisects the spaces, a visual ‘hook’ for busy commuters in the bustling city.

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[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Fixtures & Interiors. ]

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Swim the Thames: Pair of Pools for London’s Polluted River

28 Jan

[ By WebUrbanist in Architecture & Public & Institutional. ]

london urban swimming design

Inspired by planned Super Sewer that will reduce pollution in London’s central waterway by 96%, this audacious design aims to take advantage of a future in which it is finally safe again to swim in the River Thames. Unlike a similar proposal for New York City’s Hudson River (more on that below), this bold plan proposes to use unfiltered river water to fill its swimming holes.

london swimming overview image

london pool site plan

Studio Octopi and their partners at Civic Engineers and Jonathan Cook Landscape Architects ask doubters to imagine the experience of clean swimming right in the heart of the city, with incredible urban views framed by rich regional plant life.

london pool structural diagram

One fixed-in-place pool would be replenished each time the surrounding tides rise over its high water mark (like coastal rock pools). The other would itself lift and lower, floating up and down with the river’s natural highs and lows, thus providing swimmers with a sense of the currents but within a protected space.

london thames in context

london pool landscape watercolor

More on the project’s context: “In 1865, Sir Joseph Bazalgette’s London sewage system was opened. 150 years later the sewers are at the limits of their capacity. In 2012, 57 combined sewer overflows discharged 39 million tonnes of sewage into the River Thames. Thames Water is planning the Thames Tideway Tunnel, or ‘Super Sewer’, for completion in 2023.”

new york pool rendering

new york urban swimming

Meanwhile, across the pond in New York, the Plus Pool reached its crowdfunding goal some time ago but is a long way from completion. Though both propose to use water from the rivers they are set in, this one, unlike its British brethren, assumes filters will be essential.

new york pool diagram

new york plus pool

The design is also somewhat more contemporary – the plus shape is clean, modern and separates the pool into four primary zones for different use cases.

new york pool section

new york hudson pool

Whether either proposal will be realized remains to be seen, but one thing they may have in common: selling the public has already proven easier than pushing their respective cities into accepting the plans and taking action on them.

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Stereoscopic 3D Test Footage – 1080i Stereo Pair

17 Nov

Stereoscopic Test camera mount test footage shot at Durham University Botanical Gardens. Will use the YT3D tag for a comparison to pre-converted Anaglyph Red + Cyan.
Video Rating: 5 / 5

You can view this demo of living pictures in 3D using colored (anaglyph) glasses, a 3D display, or by doing fancy tricks with your eyes. We’ve shared this video so that anyone, with or without a 3D monitor, can view the demo. Lytro’s Light Field camera www.lytro.com automatically captures pictures that can be viewed in 3D. For best results, we recommend viewing the video at 720p or higher. Want to see it without hearing it? Here’s a version for you to enjoy www.youtube.com All living pictures © Lytro, Inc, and photographers Eric Cheng, Richard Koci Hernandez, Jason Bradley, and Michael Soo. More on how YouTube presents 3D content: www.google.com

 
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