Showing posts with label publication. Show all posts
Showing posts with label publication. Show all posts

21 October 2014

Good as new!

0 Comment
Interesting that Sneakerology is still constantly requested by press after the years!

It is published this time by Index Book from Barcelona, Spain as one of the "...projects that represent the forefront of retail design".

I sometimes wonder what defines Architecture.
At this moment, for me, it is about "timelessness".

Maybe Sneakerology is on its way to becoming Architecture...


 

 

 

 

 

5 December 2013

Blu Creativity on Archdaily

0 Comment
Our project, Blu Creativity has been published on Archdaily!

...this time the image looks normal, hurray!

Click HERE to view the article
Click HERE to see other entries on Blu Creativity
Click HERE to see Blu Creativity in our official website
Click HERE to see other entries relating to ArchDaily


ArchDaily was founded in March 2008 with the one mission of delivering the most complete information to architects around the world; every week, every day, every hour, every moment: as soon as it happens . It is the online source of continuous information for a growing community of thousands of architects searching for the latest architectural news: projects, products, events, interviews and competitions among others.

1 December 2013

Blu Creativity on Designboom

0 Comment

Our project Blu Creativity has been published on Designboom!

porous space..

Original article on Designboom HERE
Official page on Blu Creativity with more pictures HERE
Find out about behind the scene HERE
Other Facet Studio projects covered by Designboom HERE

founded in 1999, designboom is the world’s first and most popular digital architecture and design magazine.
TIME magazine chose designboom as one of the top 100 design influencers in the world, one of just eight online publications to be so named. in 2011, the french magazine architectural digest called designboom one of the top ‘les 100 qui comptent’ (‘people who count‘) in the design world… from the forefront of contemporary culture and global lifestyle.

20 November 2013

M House on Designboom

0 Comment
Our project M House has been published on Designboom!

I love this night shot..

Original article on Designboom HERE
Official page on M house with more pictures HERE
Find out about behind the scene HERE
Other Facet Studio projects covered by Designboom HERE

founded in 1999, designboom is the world’s first and most popular digital architecture and design magazine.
TIME magazine chose designboom as one of the top 100 design influencers in the world, one of just eight online publications to be so named. in 2011, the french magazine architectural digest called designboom one of the top ‘les 100 qui comptent’ (‘people who count‘) in the design world… from the forefront of contemporary culture and global lifestyle.

11 November 2013

Meaningful Design in a Logical Way

0 Comment
Facet Studio has been included in Shanghai's Designer & Designing magazine as one of the practices of outstanding young architects.

Multiple projects have been covered, including: Streetology, Blu Creativity, Watermoon, M House

The interview was named "Meaningful Design in a Logical Way", which I thought was apt for our approach and the Chinese translation was true to the original.  Overall, happy with the article.
And I must say it is flattering to know that people that far away are interested to hear about what we think of design and philosophies..



 

 

 

 

Cover of Designer & Designing Issue 65

24 October 2013

Anomaly on Australian Design Review

0 Comment
Anomaly was published on Australian Design Review website!

Hehehe.. and of course our Coexistence stool is published as it is part of the inaugural collection to launch Anomaly amongst other designs.

As press material were submitted prior to the final prototype was completed, the image is still of an earlier prototype.
To see the final prototype together with the rest of the range, enter HERE.


 

19 August 2013

Inspiring Connect Sydney

0 Comment
Our project Connect Sydney has been published by Beijing's CIP Publisher.

 

 
Cover of "Inspiring Office"

26 July 2013

Are you watching Facet Studio?

0 Comment
Facet Studio is "One to Watch" in this issue of Architectural Review Asia Pacific - AR130 Winter 2013.

Check it out at all good newsagents!

  

cover of AR130

13 March 2013

A bit more on other projects....

0 Comment
Rounding up some recent publications....

Hospitality:

Powerful imagery of Uchi Lounge has a strong presence in WORKshop issue 08.
Nice to read in the blog of our structural engineer for Uchi Lounge: "...It is interesting how tight budgets and great architects drive great engineering."
I guess true creativity spark when being confined by restrictions...



 Cover of WORKshop issue 08

Watermoon is published by Chinese publishing house Sandu (available via PageOne) in "Taste It! - Innovative Restaurant Interiors".
It is also published by German publishing house Gestalten in "Let's Go Out! - Interiors and Architecture for Restaurants and Bars".
Watermoon was completed in 2010 May.
In the retail / hospitality world, where fitouts require constant renewal, Watermoon is considered an "old project".  Yet it continues to be picked up by publishing houses and gathering attention.  I think this says something about our consistent attitude towards architecture (permanence) and interior (transience).


Cover of "Taste it!"


Cover of "Let's Go Out!"

Retail:

Sneakerology and Streetology continue to gather attention after their completion in 2010 / 2011.  The design took place in 2009.
Again, they should be considered "old projects"....but still looking refreshing and stunning (hopefully I am allowed to say that myself...).

We consider longevity of design = ultimate sustainability 

"Brand Spaces - Branded Architecture and the Future of Retail Design" published by Gestalten (Germany)

  
  
Retail Design International Vol 74 No 5 (US)


19 September 2012

Sneakerology on SPA-DE

0 Comment
Our project Sneakerology was published in SPA-DE Space & Design magazine in Japan!

It is interesting how Sneakerology continues to generate press interest internationally although the project has been completed a while ago... but our older projects are also still getting picked up by press...

I take this very positively, as we consciously do not design according to transient trends; hopefully this attitude reflects in our projects, and hopefully has prolonged their design life-span.




28 August 2012

Dezeen x Uchi Lounge

0 Comment
Our project, Uchi Lounge 01 has been published on Dezeen!


Click HERE to view the article
Click HERE to see other entries on Uchi Lounge
Click HERE to see Uchi Lounge 01 in our official website
Click HERE to see other entries relating to Dezeen

Dezeen is UK based online design magazine with 2 million monthly visitors, and included in Time magazine’s Design 100 list of the most influential forces in global design, and in Design Week magazine’s Hot 50 list of key figures in design.

21 August 2012

More love from ArchDaily

0 Comment
Both Uchi Lounge 01 and 02 have been published on ArchDaily!

 

 
For Uchi Lounge 01, enter HERE to read the original post.
For Uchi Lounge 02, enter HERE to read the original post.

Click HERE to see other entries on Uchi Lounge
Click HERE to see Uchi Lounge 01 in our official website
Click HERE to see Uchi Lounge 02 in our official website
Click HERE to see other entries relating to ArchDaily


ArchDaily was founded in March 2008 with the one mission of delivering the most complete information to architects around the world; every week, every day, every hour, every moment: as soon as it happens . It is the online source of continuous information for a growing community of thousands of architects searching for the latest architectural news: projects, products, events, interviews and competitions among others.

14 August 2012

Uchi Lounge 02 on Dezeen

0 Comment
Our project, Uchi Lounge 02, has been featured in Dezeen!

 
Click HERE to view the article
Click HERE to see other entries on Uchi Lounge
Click HERE to see Uchi Lounge 02 in our official website
Click HERE to see other entries relating to Dezeen

Dezeen is UK based online design magazine with 2 million monthly visitors, and included in Time magazine’s Design 100 list of the most influential forces in global design, and in Design Week magazine’s Hot 50 list of key figures in design.


21 March 2012

Sneakerology on InDesign Live

0 Comment
Sneakerology and the news of its Frame Moooi Award shortlisting is announced on InDesign Live.

indesignlive.com

Amongst the 10 shortlisted projects, we are the only one from Australia..

16 March 2012

Hello Philippe Starck!

1 Comment
The Frame Moooi Award has announced the 10 shortlisted projects, amongst 891 submissions over 79 countries - and Facet Studio is in the top 10!!

www.frameweb.com 

Here is a description of the award from the designboom website:
the FRAME moooi award 2012 is hosted by dutch furniture company moooi in collaboration with FRAME magazine. it's the year’s biggest inaugural interior design award and will be concluded in milan during april’s salone del mobile fair.
the award celebrates the 10 years of production and exhibition activities of renowned design brand moooi. designboom has been the exclusive online media partner and a whopping 891 submissions were received by designers in 79 countries. ... participants were responding to the brief which asked designers and architects to submit interior space design along with furniture and lighting objects that were CUSTOM-developed in a worldwide context.
the contest has been judged by french designer philippe starck, he selected the shortlist with an anonymous approach, in that he didn’t know the designers’ names or countries of origins. ‘I’m often invited to judge competitions,’ he says. ‘I’m happy to say that the level of this one is clearly higher than average, a very nice surprise.’ the designs and their creators will be featured in the may/june issue of FRAME magazine.
Facet Studio custom designed "Shoe Box" for the project Sneakerology.
The 'Shoe box" is made of plywood and resin, each has its own dedicated light source to individually illuminate the displayed item.
The plywood wall of the box houses all the electrical wiring and structural fixing, which enables the "Shoe boxes' to be stacked together and to be structurally strong enough to resist people pushing against the stacked "Shoe Box" wall when it is used as partition screen or shop facade.

Here are a few links if you are interest to find out more about the Frame Moooi Award:

www.framemoooi.com

www.designboom.com

And to find out more about Sneakerology:

27 February 2012

Turning page

0 Comment
Our project Streetology has been included in German magazine, Page, as a leading examples amongst other international projects to show how the celebration of a vending machine culture and a new creativity has taken the idea further into new sales concepts for stores, marketing and communication all over the world (projects from Amsterdam, Okinawa, Frankfurt, US to Sydney.)



Here is a translation of the article for the curious, courtesy of my lovely German friend Nataly:
"Analog Info Graphic"
The shop design for Streetology in Sydney makes reference to the vending machine concept.  Olivia Shih and Yoshihito Kashiwagi who are running the Architecture Office Facet Studio in Sydney have come up with a concept where T Shirts are displayed in transparent tubes. They are sorted by colours and stacked in 2,550 vending tubes. When a customer buys a T Shirt in green all green T Shirts drop down a spot, effectively creating an analog info graphic display; the bar with the most purchased colour is decreasing the fastest.
The shop design, in cooperation with Simpson Design Associates and Agency babekuehl is celebrating a democratic attitude/ Zeitgeist expressing what is popular on the street - as the name says "Streetology".

25 January 2012

Italian

0 Comment
Our first publication in Italian!

Cover

First page of the article

11 January 2012

Delaying "speed of consumption"

0 Comment
Kicking start 2012 with an interview by Architype.

Architype Interviews

It is a time-consuming exercise to work on interviews, however it does provide invaluable opportunity for us to reflect and refine our thinkings.

Below I have included the text of the interview for the curious...

--------------------------------------------------------------

What was the most difficult issue about working within this building type or the most unexpected challenge that may have influenced new thought in your project?
We found to design a space which delays the “speed of consumption” in design style something challenging in retail design.
There is certain transience, fashion, and catchiness required of retail design. The investment in producing a retail design reaches its peak in attracting customers at the time of completion; slowly the attraction fades until a new design is required. The lifespan of this design may have been 2-3 years in the past, however it is now reduced to 6 months – 1 year, or less, before consumers start to require new excitement.  This change of speed is most likely brought about by the surplus of information, the accessibility of design news and change of lifestyle in general.
For example, comparing the impressions given by a shop now and 6 months ago, somehow the shop seems to be out of fashion in the 6 months period, although it is exactly the same shop; this is simply because the person looking at the shop feels that it is “out of fashion”.  The design of the shop is dependent upon the material and thematic trend as well as its connotation, hence when this connotation of trend changes according to time, it is without a doubt that the meaning implied by the design changes to cause a different impression.
Therefore we have decided to approach the design of Sneakerology, independent of this “connotation of the material and thematic trend”.  By analyzing the naming of the shop, we discovered its underlying retail philosophy: “to express the merchandise (Sneaker) in a scholarly fashion (-ology)”. We placed our design emphasis on this philosophy, and tirelessly explored methods to give physicality to this philosophy. As a result, we reached a simple expression of “sneaker showcase”; it is in this kind of expression of design essence where we feel a longevity in design style, which will not lose its impressiveness within a mere few years.
Did this project expand or evolve your role as an architect in any way In general, do you feel that the role of the architect is changing on current projects?
Our projects come from not only in Australia but also from many different countries such as Japan, China, and France.  Because of this global nature of our work, seems as though there is a variety of roles we are required to play as architects; however if we think further in depth, fundamentally “what we are doing” is not different from “what we have been doing”.  As long as we are designing space for people, we believe our role is primarily the same.
How is your building possible today in a way that it may not have been before and how have trends in technology and society inspired new thought and solutions?
The genre and amount of available consumables are increasing at an immeasurable rate; it is a curious concern in the modern day that due to this immeasurable increase, it becomes ever so difficult for people to find what they really want.  It is also more likely to find on the Internet cheaper price at any on time one wishes to shop.  Although there are so many benefits brought upon by Internet shopping, we believe the biggest benefit amongst all is the convenience Internet shopping brings to the consumers in simplifying the process to “find what they really want”.
If this is the case, there is no reason why we should not be utilizing the Internet as interface of consumerism.  The consumer who finds what he/ she wants on the Internet, visits the shop after checking merchandise size and availability on the Internet.  He/ she then learns more about the merchandise in detail (such as design concept of the particular sneaker) through the touchpanels located centrally in the shop.  It is important at this point to maintain a consistent numbering system managing the merchandises on the Internet, the touchpanels as well as the “sneaker showcases”.  As soon as the consumer recognizes the merchandise as a sum of data, all he/ she needs to do is to search according to the number assigned to each “sneaker showcase” to be able to see the actual merchandise, and to physically be in contact with the merchandise.  The journey of “find what they really want” in the virtual world is now concluded smoothly in the discovery of the actual merchandise in the shop.
In terms of retail design, we consider the potential of technology lies in its capability to help simplifying the discovery process of “find what they really want”.
In the context of this project, how is your office and design process being influenced by current trends in academic curricula and incoming young architects?  In turn, how are current projects and processes guiding the ongoing reformulation and development of academic curricula?
The recent trend of BIM assisted design gives architects the sense of possibility in new design expressions, and to surprise spectators of the these forms created by utilizing this technology.  However we would like to pause for some thoughts here: “Is it possible that we are simply amazed by our familiarity of this technology, and the complicated unique forms generated by it?”  The foundation of our thinking should remain in defining of design meaning, and the user of the space – human.  A space absent of these 2 elements can be referred to as a “selfish” space created solely by the ego of its architect.
What we have designed for this project is a simple 200mmX600mm “sneaker showcase”.  If we put it in a simplistic manner, all we did was to repeat the “sneaker showcase” 281 times over.  This modularized box was efficiently produced in the factory off-site and to reduce the material wastage as much as we could.  On-site the assemblage is a continuity of simple repetition, with the construction process itself also being of simple nature.  By doing so, the modularized box has a high level of built-in flexibility, which can easily adapt to the unique shape of the site.  Although this space is a product of series of simple processes, the impact it gives people is nothing short of impressiveness.
We believe, this process of giving physicality to a simple idea is still valid in creating spaces that are capable to amaze people, and to touch their heart; we believe that fantastic spaces can still be created without the need to complicatedly design and compete with acrobatic building forms.