Design Stuff

January 23, 2008

E-paper interactive map with GPS

Filed under: Futuristic, Gadgets, Concepts

Before you get all excited: There’s no such gadget. This is a concept device. The images are artists’ rendering. Now that we’ve convinced you to not email us about where to purchase this, let’s talk about Traveller. Traveller was designed by Nikita Golovlev, an industrial design student in the UK. The idea is a satellite navigation “book” coupled with an e-paper to replace a tourist map. Since concept devices have no limits, Nikita also threw in memory card reader, USB port, Wi-Fi, bluetooth, ability to sync your pics with the location they were taken, and open source platform to allow for other applications to be used.

Source : E-Paper with GPS 

The Man in the Spoon

Filed under: Art

Carrol Boyes is a teacher who decided to pursue her love of art and went back to school and did a sculpture degree. In order to share her art with everyone she made spoons in pewter; spoons with waves, faces, curves and other lovely details.

Soon her work was so in demand that her company grew to employ over 400 people, and she distributed her work world wide.

Carrol Boyes is based on the Atlantic Ocean, in Cape Town, South Africa, but you can purchase her work all over the United States, as well as the UK and other countries through her website and local suppliers.

Source : 2modern 

Waterfall Faucet by Frisone - new C3 & CD3 bathroom faucet designs

Experience the lively exuberance of a waterfall everyday with the new C3 and CD3 bathroom faucet designs, carefully designed waterfall faucets from Frisone. It’s easy to appreciate the magic of flowing water with the waterfall faucet: the spout is open at the top. The C3 features a handle with an easy to use lever; the CD3 has a more compact and minimal handle.

Both come as mixer taps, either free standing or wall-mounted. With simple geometric shapes, the style lets the beauty of water draw the attention, allowing the waterfall to calm and inspire. Bring the refined and urbane waterfall faucet from Frisone into your life for an enhanced bathing experience.

Source : waterfall faucet designs 

Public art project plans to put waterfalls in NYC’s East River

Filed under: Art

The city is sponsoring a massive art exhibition that would bring four giant waterfalls to the East River between Manhattan and Brooklyn.

Scandinavian artist Olafur Eliasson was commissioned to build "New York City Waterfalls" at four locations in the river near the southern tip of Manhattan, including at the Brooklyn base of the iconic Brooklyn Bridge.

The project will require erecting scaffolding between 27 and 37 metres high in the water, then using pumps to force water to the top, where it will fall back into the river. The city said fish and aquatic life would be protected through intake pools in the river that would filter the water.

The waterfalls will be visible from land and boat, and the city will have a website with recommended viewing sites and bike routes.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg was expected to officially announce the project on Tuesday. It was first reported Monday in The New York Sun.

Eliasson’s project would come three years after the Bulgarian artist Christo and his wife, Jeanne-Claude, erected 7,503 door frames or "gates" draped with orange fabric along 37 kilometres of Central Park footpaths. It drew an estimated four million visitors to the park, including 1.5 million out-of-towners, between Feb. 12-27, 2005, and pumped $254 million into the city economy.

The city estimates the waterfall project this summer will contribute more than $50 million to the economy.

Eliasson, born in Denmark to Icelandic parents in 1967, is known for work that uses elements of nature to evoke sensory experiences. His work has been seen in galleries and institutions around the world and at events like the Venice Biennale, the world’s oldest and most prestigious contemporary art fair.

Among his pieces are "The weather project" at the Tate Modern in London, which used lights, reflection and mist to evoke the sun and sky. He is also the subject of a retrospective opening at the Museum of Modern Art in April.

Source : canadian.google..com 

Clever interaction design in this DJ equipment to go

Filed under: Gadgets

The Pacemaker is a pocket size DJ system, produced by a small Swedish company called Tonium.

The device features include a 120 Gb hard drive, an SNR of 103, and a slew of basic DJ audio tools, including a Line out Crossfader, a Headphones Crossfader, Bend, Pitch, DJ Pause, Cue, Loop, EQ, Filter, Sound FX, Headphone Jack, Line out jack and a USB 2.0 connector.

Reviewed in today’s International Herald Tribune, it sure seems to contain quite some clever interaction design.

 

Source : core77 

World’s Greenest Building Going Up In Paris - Energy Plus

Filed under: Futuristic, Concepts

The home of the Eiffel Tower is getting a new architectural innovation- and a green one at that. The Energy Plus office building, to be located outside of Paris, is designed to consume no electricity other than that which it creates itself. This zero-energy building, according to the designers, will be the greenest office building ever created.

The 70,000 square meter building is designed by architecture uberfirm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, who have also designed the Guandong Green Skyscraper and a proposed green skyscraper in San Francisco. The low-rise building will be located in the Gennevilliers area of Paris, near the Seine river. It is designed to house around 5,000 occupants.

How does this building achieve its goal? For starters, the building will be heavily insulated - enough to reduce its energy use to about 16 kilowatts per square meter, which is considerably lower than that of a standard building. Cold water from the Seine river will be pumped throughout the offices eliminating the need for a standard air conditioner unit. And to actively contribute to the highest standard of energy efficiency, designers have engineered the building to have the largest solar array in the world installed in the roof. It is this solar array which will provide all the energy needs of the building, as well as providing additional energy to be fed back into the grid.

Despite its energy payments over the long term, initial construction of the Energy Plus Building will not come cheap. The building is expected to cost anywhere from 25% to 30% more than standard office blocks. Still, if one considers the future savings and lower maintenance costs, the building might come out being one of the best investments that this developer has ever done.

Source : Inhabitat