Land+Living
Land+Living
November 2004

Kamelyon Design
Contemporary Lighting and Lamps
Lighting and lamps from Austin based Kamelyon Design.
"Kamelyon Design is a design and manufacturing studio that specializes in custom handmade fixtures and shades. Brett Grinkmeyer formed Kamelyon Design in early 2000 to pursue his interest in furniture and lighting design. Kamelyon Design combines his skill as a designer and his passion for fine craftsmanship. The light sculptures have received acclaim not only for their unique designs, but also for their innovative construction. Mr. Grinkmeyer makes each one of the lamps by hand insuring the highest level of quality possible. The goal of Kamelyon Design is to break new ground and to create truly unique designs that stir the soul – designs that transcend fad or fashion."

Link: Kamelyon Design [Thanks, Brett!]


AIA/LA 2004 Awards
Cutting edge in contemporary architecture
"Each year the American Institute of Architects Los Angeles Chapter recognizes significant achievements in local architecture at their awards gala, held this year at the California Science Center School.

Winning projects represent the cutting edge in contemporary architecture, interior design and historic restoration, selected by a distinguished jury of local and internationally known architects."

Some of the winning firms include:

  • SPF Architects
  • Kanner Architects
  • Lorcan O'Herlihy
  • Pugh + Scarpa Architects

    Link: AIA LA
    Via: Royal Homes Toronto Studio


  • Fun
    Elastic Shelving
    New Shelving from Shapes-Design:
    FUN - designed by Alessandra Maiolino - is a pioneering and exquisite elastic shelving system. Modular stainless steel elements innovatively combine with beautifully fashioned shelves, made from plywood with sensuous linoleum faces in various colours. Because FUN does not rely on uprights of fixed lengths, it enables you to shape it into a number of highly versatile combinations, with different numbers, heights, and widths of shelves. FUN is easy to transport, assemble, and mould to your changing needs and aspirations. It is available for both the home and commercial application.
    Designer: Alessandra Maiolino
    Link: Shapes-Design

    Bark Deco
    Truly modern dog beds.
    Even though my dog would prefer to sleep in a tent rather than sleep in a bed, I'm sure once he got used to it he'd be right at home in Teak Dino from Bark Deco.

    Bark Deco makes modern doggy beds in three styles availble in a multitude of fabrics and wood veneers.

    bark deco beds are designed to provide the ultimate in modern style and luxury for the special members of your family. every bark deco bed is handmade from start to finish. the platforms are constructed from birch hardwood with the care and attention to detail given to fine furniture.

    exotic wood veneers are applied and finished by hand over the course of several days. veneers offered in the debut collection are wenge, zebrawood and teak. all bark deco beds measure seven inches tall (regardless of size). each model features a ventilated platform and is elevated for style and comfort (no drafty floors). rubber feet are added to help keep the bed in place.

    Link: Bark Deco [Thanks, Joyce!]

    M7 Prototype
    Low-cost housing
    The feature article this month at Domus highlights a group of Chilean architects and their system of designing low-cost housing.
    The M7 prototype is the result of a slow process of research and development, begun in 2001 by the Chilean architects’ cooperative URO1.ORG. Its aim was to find modular construction solutions that would allow users to freely configure and construct their own small-scale architecture. The weekend home, located at Tunquén on a green plateau facing the Pacific Ocean, was used as an experiment to study a variety of possible materials and to perfect assembly methods based on extreme simplicity and practical economy.
    Full article available at Domus.

    Firm: URO1.org
    Via: Domus (Registration Req'd)


    Menos
    Multifunctional living concept
    From designer Peter Maly comes Minos.
    "Menos is the answer to the challenges of modern life. Living areas are not sectioned off, but rather they merge into each other. The multifunctional concept provides you with the freedom to use living areas more effectively and more creatively too. With innumerable combinations, use Menos to create new designs over and over again: closed and open elements, drawers, shelves and containers always adapted to your respective requirements. Whether in living, sleeping, or dining areas, meonos creates rooms and defines the harmonious unity of living in general. A feeling of feeling at home."
    Designer: Peter Maly
    Link: House of European Design [Thanks, Aliona!]

    Cascades Lake House/Jacobsen Retreat
    Mountain residence negotiates steep wooded site
    Seattle based E. Cobb Architects create regional modern design solutions with an emphasis on space and material. We admire many of their projects, many are more eye catching, but his one in particular is of interest to us because they way that the design responds to specific site conditions over formal considerations.

    Located on a lake front site in the Cascade Mountain Range, the house navigates an extreme topography drops 54 feet over 126 feet in distance from the road to the lake shore. The house negotiates the slope and the "occupyable spaces high in the tree branches" with minimal site clearing or grading.

    Firm: E. Cobb Architects Inc.


    88 Xintiandi Wall
    Striking and simple solution by Lekker Projects
    We've said it before, but we must say it again: it is the simple solutions that we often find to be the most elegant.

    In this case, Lekker Projects, a small environmental design firm with offices in Shanghai and Singapore, was faced with the problem of correcting bad Feng Shui while creating a distinct signage element for the 88 Xintiandi Hotel in Shanghai. The solution was to use Chinese roof tiles (the symbol of the hotel) in an inventive way to create a simple but striking result. The form of the tiles are instantly recongnizable, but their application is inspired.

    Firm: Lekker Projects
    Link: 88 Xintiandi


    Ekobo
    Contemporary bamboo home accessories
    Lately, it seems as if bamboo products are popping up everywhere and obviously for good reasons: It's a fantastic material to work with and it replenishes itself in half the time as other wood (yes, we know it's technically a grass). On that note, Ekobo has an entire product line crafted from bamboo. Trays, bowls, and stools to name just a few.
    Made of eco-friendly bamboo, ekobo is a line of contemporary tableware designed in France and hand-crafted in Vietnam in respect of the rules of equitable commerce.

    Designer: ekobo
    Link: illico design [Thanks, Thomas!]


    Iron Doorbell
    Not exactly modern, but definitely retro cool.
    Imagine for a moment that you had one of these retro-cool turnkey doorbells installed in your place. How many people do you think would have no idea how to use it or for that matter, even know what it was? I can see it now, "look at this guy, his deadbolt was installed the wrong way!"
    This is really what used to be a corridor bell, as it was originally used for flats in apartment blocks. But the neat bell mechanism, made completely without the use of plastic components, can also be heard in the average-sized family house. The key twist mechanism is designed to fit doors of 6 cm thickness, but can be shortened for thinner doors by cutting the square shaft with a hacksaw. The quality nickel-coated steel plate bell can also be mounted outside.

    Link: Manufactum
    Via: The Red Ferret Journal


    Metro Shed
    Move over MD-100, there's a new shed in town.
    This is the first we've heard of the Metro Shed, but at first glance, it looks to offer a nice alternative for those of you contemplating a new backyard pool house.
    The MetroShed idea grew from the need to have a quiet, detached living / working space close to home. The MetroShed is a modern outdoor structure created using top quality wood, glass, aluminum and acrylic building materials. The MetroShed is sold as an unfurnished shell, or fully furnished ready to enjoy. The MetroShed can also be customized to match existing modern contemporary residences.
    The Metro Shed can also be customized to match your modern home.

    Link: Metro Shed [Thanks, Donovan!]


    Downtown Mauled - Part II
    Victoria Gardens: the illusion continues in Rancho Cucamonga
    Victoria Gardens is not a ground breaking step in the evolution of malls. The idea borrows from New Urbanist concepts fused with the concepts or retail design explored by John Jerde. Similar to Jerde’s work, Victoria Gardens is, to borrow the words of Margaret Crawford, "between the commercial and the artistic, the popular and the pure, and, of course, the high and the low."

    But Victoria Gardens is no City Walk, its ambitions are much less hyper-realistic, and perhaps this is what sets it apart from many other themed malls that we have seen. But the result is a somewhat duplicitous place that insists it is one thing when it is actually something else.

    Link: Victoria Gardens
    Reference: Downtown Mauled - Part I


    Downtown Mauled - Part I
    Victoria Gardens: suburban mall impersonates a town center in Rancho Cucamonga
    This former agricultural center 50 miles east of Los Angeles was once home to sprawling groves and vineyards, but has been more recently known for the sprawl of big-box mini-malls and cookie cutter tract homes. Now a new development seeks to be the downtown that Rancho Cucamonga, California has never had.

    The New York Times saw fit to cover the opening of this new mall, so we figured that it was worth the 40 minute drive to check it out. City planners had originally envisioned a more traditional mall, but the developers had a bold idea that breaks many (though not all) of the rules of the typical mall development. The idea behind Victoria Gardens is not new, pseudo-historic town centers are the core of most New Urbanist neighborhoods, but here it has been inserted into an existing tract home city.

    The name of this mall betrays its form; all of the shops are located along an urban grid of streets open to vehicular traffic, complete with parking meters and sidewalks. Parking lots and service areas located in the center of the blocks, much like a traditional American town. "Victoria Gardens" fails to provide a hint of the urban space that has been created, or perhaps this was an intentional move to calm local residents who may fear density.

    Link: Victoria Gardens
    Article: New York Times - A Different Sort of Mall for a California Town
    Reference: Downtown Mauled - Part II

    Developer: Forest City Enterprises with Lewis Retail Centers
    Masterplan and Design Concept/Design Architect: Field Paoli
    Executive Design Architect: Altoon & Porter
    Executive Architect: KA Architects
    Design Architect: Elkus Manfredi Architects
    Landscape Architect: SWA Group


    Area Home
    Good design for everyday.
    Area Home is a NY based company that specializes in bedding and home accessories with a Scandinavian flair. In addition to some terrific bedding patterns, they also make a great bed and matching tables.

    Sheets and pillows come in thread counts ranging from 200 to 300. Bed and tables are made from bent ply with walnut veneer.

    Link: Area Home [Thanks, Scott!]


    Egg Lamps
    The Pefect Shape.
    After we featured the Egg Bird Feeder back in June, we know you all ran out and got one. Well, guess what? Now, you can have the perfect accessory to complement your feeder.

    J. Schatz has come up with not one but two lamps shaped just like your favorite bird feeder, a shade lamp and a nightlight.

    Read a book next to an Egg Shade Lamp or lie in bed and stare at a ceiling full of stars with the Star Egg Nightlight. Available in nine colors and three exquisite finishes: Lush, Exotic and Crackle.
    We'll take a lush orange peel star nightlight, thanks. Speaking of eggs, a former graphic design instructor of mine once claimed that the egg was the "perfect shape." Thought you'd like to know.

    Link: Egg Lamps
    Related: Egg Bird Feeder


    Urban Organic
    Showing what wood really looks like.
    Combining the natural beauty of wood along with the occasional glass adornment, John Houshmand has created an appealing line of modern furniture. His line features a range of furniture from side tables, low tables and dining tables to to benches, beds and shelving. His philospy is literally "to show what wood really looks like."

    Our favorite pieces include the spalted naple low bench/table (featured at right) and the black walnut table (middle image featured below).

    Link: John Houshmand


    The Garden Book
    Like The Art Book, but greener.
    "The Garden Book presents a widely diverse range of designers responsible for some of the most interesting and iconic gardens and landscapes of all time from around the world. Gardens of Ancient Persia, the Moguls of India, and the palaces of Chinese Emperors sit side by side with contemporary gardens from the USA and Europe.

    Like The Art Book, this book presents 500 designers in an AZ format that departs from the usual emphasis on genres and time periods. The gardens are carefully selected to choose the appropriate work for key figures which illustrates their influence on the traditions of gardening in many countries around the world. They range, therefore, from the palaces of kings to the all-consuming passions, bordering on obsessions, of amateur enthusiasts."

    Link: Phaidon Press
    Link: McNally Robinson


    34 Los Angeles Architects
    How 34 LA architects approach their work
    Exhibition at A+D Museum in Los Angeles running November 18, 2004 through February 22nd, 2005.
    The exhibit is a preview in support of a new book to be published by Balcony Press and scheduled for release in the Fall of 2005 – entitled “2000 + New Architecture from Los Angeles”. The book’s editor is John Chase.

    Each participating architect has fitted the presentation of his work into a diamond-shaped 6 ft x 2 ft “tower” designed by Lorcan O’Herlihy, AIA. The towers are mounted on wheels, arranged randomly, and can move around the room. This affords the viewer a walk through the exhibit non-sequentially, much like walking through a forest of trees. Each firm’s viewpoint is contained within the tower and may be studied from all angles by a single viewer, or by a group of viewers, thus presenting an opportunity for discussion.

    Link: A+D Architecture and Design Museum

    Garden on Turtle Creek
    Modern landscape design aesthetics meets environmental sensitivity
    Lush modern landscape from NY based firm Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates.
    The Garden on Turtle Creek, started in 1997 and completed in May 1999, is a model for the union of modern landscape design aesthetics and environmental sensitivity. Weaving new landscape elements into the sites natural systems and intense native vegetation, the garden mediates two strong contextual forces: the sophisticated glass, limestone, and concrete house, designed by Antoine Predock from 1987-1993, and the unpredictable site condition of a steep, richly vegetated slope that descends into Turtle Creek.
    Link: Michael Van Valkenburg

    Hungary for good design?
    Geppetto Design Studio, Budapest
    We're not too familiar with the contemporary Hungarian design scene... actually, we didn't really even know there was one. That sounds a bit ignorant, but apparently we've just not run across any Hungarian designers recently. Never the less, we're digging the work of Budapest based designers Elek Márton, Elek Máté, Buzogány Ildikó of Geppetto.

    Their designs run the gambit of interior furnishings, fittings, accessories and interior designs. Their styles is clean and fun, and somehow familiar... could it be that we have seen Geppetto's work before and just not known who they were? Check them out... and please do take note, won't you?

    Link: Geppetto


    Nik's Project
    A limited collection from Nikolas Piper
    The Olman side table (featured at right) is just one of many pieces crafted by Nikolas Piper and on display at niksproject.com.
    "Nik's Project presents a limited collection of pieces designed by Nikolas Piper for specific projects ordered by foundations and private institutions. The combination of traditional forge and modern technologies which Nikolas combines in his designs create these timeless pieces of furniture whose outstanding features are their organic, sensual and functional characteristics."
    Also from Nikolas comes "Alice's Legs", a beautifully crafted chaise lounge constructed from high-end teak or birch laminated wood with iron fittings and stainless steel.

    Link: Nik's Project
    Link: Alice's Legs


    Felipe Assadi
    Santiago, Chile based Architect
    It is always interesting for us to "discover" to work of an architect outside of our usual sphere of influence (our sphere based from Los Angeles, California).

    We recently came across the work of Chilean architect Felipe Assadi and were impressed with the quality of work produced by his five person firm. We think that his work holds its own compared with work by European and American architects with whom we are better acquainted and certainly deserves some attention.

    Link: Felipe Assadi