Pop-up Restaurant By OS31 Will Be Built Over A Frozen River

News: British studio OS31 has won a competition to design a pop-up restaurant on the surface of a frozen river in Winnipeg, Canada.

Pop-up restaurant on a frozen lake by OS31

The RAW:almond restaurant will be installed at the point where the mouth of the Assiniboine meets the Red River, as part of the Canadian city’s annual winter festival.


Related story: Shelters resembling giant pompoms by RAW Design warm skaters on a frozen river


OS31, a studio specialising in lightweight, flexible architecture, has designed an X-shaped structure intended to symbolise the crossing of the two rivers.

Pop-up restaurant on a frozen lake by OS31

A metal scaffolding structure will provide the building’s framework, as a nod to the rhythmic construction of a nearby bridge.

“The plan is made up of two clashing geometries,” said studio founder Tony Broomhead, who designed the restaurant alongside architects Matt Pearson and Ross Jordan.

Pop-up restaurant on a frozen lake by OS31Site plan –

“The design creates an expressive frame that floats across the ice like a frozen jetty, whilst providing a dining experience that is clear from structure,” he said. “The exterior and interior are expressed as separate forms, one enclosed inside the other.”

Spaces inside the restaurant will be framed by faceted white walls, described as being “sculptural like drifts of snow”.

Pop-up restaurant on a frozen lake by OS31Diagram –

A terrace will extend out from one of the building’s four arms, providing an entrance to a bar area. Two others will contain dining areas, while the fourth will house the kitchen.

This will be the third iteration of the RAW:almond restaurant, which claims to be the “first ever outdoor fine dining restaurant on a frozen body of water”. It will open to the public on 22 January.

Pop-up restaurant on a frozen lake by OS31Floor plan –

Each winter Winnipeg’s frozen rivers also host a series of shelters to keep skaters warm – last year’s took the form of giant pompoms.

Dezeen

Salone Del Mobile President Claudio Luti Resigns After Boardroom Shakeup

Claudio Luti

News: Claudio Luti has resigned as president of Milan’s Salone Internazionale del Mobile after less than two years in the role, following a shakeup of the furniture fair’s ownership structure.

Luti, who is also CEO of Italian furniture brand Kartell, stepped down as president of both the annual furniture fair and its organising body Cosmit (Comitato Organizzatore del Salone del Mobile Italiano).


Related story: New Salone del Mobile president to tackle issues that “damage Milan”


The move follows news that Federlegno Arredo, an association of Italian furniture producers that owns Cosmit, had taken full control of the subsidiary as part of a boardroom restructuring and appointed its own president, Roberto Snaidero, as chairman of the furniture fair.

Federlegno Arredo have given Snaidero full powers over all aspects of the fair’s operations, effectively forcing Luti aside.

“Hereby we inform you that with a press release issued yesterday afternoon it was announced that Federlegno Arredo s.r.l. acquired Cosmit S.p.A. through merger by incorporation,” said Luti’s office in a short statement.

“This operation thus gave birth to the new company Federlegno Arredo Eventi S.p.A which takes full control over the company that organises Salone del Mobile in Milan.

“In this context, therefore, Mr. Claudio Luti has resigned as President of Cosmit/Salone del Mobile because there are no more requirements to cover this role.”

salone-milan Alessandro Russotti dezeen Salone del Mobile takes place in Milan every April. Photograph by Alessandro Russotti

Luti, who has turned Kartell into one of Italy’s most successful design-led brands, was appointed president of the furniture fair at the end of 2012.

Last year he embarked on a series of initiatives aimed at improving the experience of visitors to the annual April fair and updating the image of Cosmit.

In an interview with Dezeen last May he accepted that Milan’s often chaotic and overpriced infrastructure damaged the city: “We have to make it easier for people to not lose time, to get where they want to be,” he said. “If things don’t work in the right way, they damage Milan, they damage our future.”

However, it is understood that some of Luti’s initiatives met with resistance, with hotel owners refusing to discuss lowering their prices during the fair and plans to overhaul the Salone del Mobile brand failing to materialise.

Members of Federlegno Arredo have been involved in the organisation of the furniture fair since the first one was held in 1961, with the trade body taking full control of Cosmit in 2008. The two organisations share offices in Foro Bonaparte in the centre of Milan.

Besides the Salone in Milan – the world’s biggest and most important furniture fair – Cosmit organises the Eurocucina kitchen fair and the Euroluce lighting fair, as well as a number of other trade shows in Italy and abroad.

Dezeen

Skeletal Pavilion Shaped Like A Lock Keeper's Cottage Pops Up In London's Olympic Park

A timber framework echoing the shape of an old lock-keeper’s cottage has been installed on both sides of a canal in London’s Olympic Park to host a two-month programme of events .

Newton College by Moira Lascelles

Newton’s Cottage was designed by Dutch art collective Observatorium for a site at the Carpenters Road Lock on the River Lea and is based on the shape of a lock keeper’s cottage originally constructed there in the 1930s.


Related story: Assemble’s latest pop-up theatre combines Tudor design with stadium architecture


Named after C Newton, the last lock keeper to manage this section of waterway, the structure straddles a mirrored bridge that was designed by Irish firm Heneghan Peng Architects and installed ahead of the Olympics.

Newton College by Moira Lascelles

The temporary pavilion was commissioned as part of a series of artistic commissions organised by the London Legacy Development Corporation to continue the legacy of the 2012 Olympic Games.

Observatorium’s choice of wood was influenced by the area’s heritage as a timber yard. As part of a commitment to supporting crafts in the area, the project team engaged trainees from the local Building Crafts College in Stratford to help with the construction.

Newton College by Moira Lascelles

“To reflect on the history of the site, to celebrate the crafts, and to use a material that you can touch and smell was important to us,” Ruud Reutelingsperger of Observatorium told Dezeen.

By dividing the structure into two parts positioned on either side of the lock, the artists intended to evoke the idea of the past and present being separate and yet connected, as well as emphasising the physical division of the site created by the canal and bridge.

Newton College by Moira Lascelles

“The park is part of a large urban development where there seems to be no room for the past,” said Reutelingsperger.

“Somehow it feels that the world is disconnected and one needs to create some connection between the past and the future, between the water and the stars, between design and crafts, the level of the park and the level of the water.”

Newton College by Moira Lascelles

A poem by Observatorium’s Andre Dekker describing the operation of the lock and the locations that the water from the River Lea passes through on its way to the site is carved into beams surrounding the top of the ground floor.

Newton College by Moira Lascelles

The structure is being used to host events and activities, curated by design consultant and writer Moira Lascelles, aimed at educating people about the history of the canal and its potential future, once plans to fully restore the lock are completed in the coming years.

Newton College by Moira Lascelles

The installation will continue to be used to stage talks, walks, dance performances and storytelling events until 29 November 2014.

It is supported by the Canal & River Trust, which aims to promote awareness of waterways in England and Wales through artistic collaborations.

Photography is by Thierry Bal.

Dezeen

Stylish Handmade BUBBLE Sofa Inspiring Cosiness By Sacha Lakic

design modern sofa Stylish Handmade BUBBLE Sofa Inspiring Cosiness by Sacha Lakic

The BUBBLE sofa is part of the new furniture designs by Sacha Lakic for the Roche Bobois autumn winter collection 2014. This entirely handmade sofa brings to mind a puffy cloud, and offers great comfort through its reassuring forms. It may be colorful and fluffy, yet its appearance is also elegant, perfectly fit for a high-class social zone or a public spaces. Its friendly look is also given by the lack of supporting legs, a feature which seems to “root” the sofa into the room.

ideas modern sofa Stylish Handmade BUBBLE Sofa Inspiring Cosiness by Sacha Lakic

The fabrication of the BUBBLE sofa required the development of an innovative textile, Techno 3D. This unique fabric is tenacious and extendable in three directions, which allows for the well rounded and tight shapes. It is composed of a robust black jersey onto which a soft touch honeycomb wool is applied. The seat and backrest are made of a bi-density foam based on a solid wood frame. The sofa is available in three colors and two dimensions, with a matching ottoman in different sizes. [Photos and information provided via e-mail by Sacha Lakic on behalf of Roche Bobois]

modern sofa 2 Stylish Handmade BUBBLE Sofa Inspiring Cosiness by Sacha Lakic modern sofa 3 Stylish Handmade BUBBLE Sofa Inspiring Cosiness by Sacha Lakic modern sofa 5 Stylish Handmade BUBBLE Sofa Inspiring Cosiness by Sacha Lakic modern sofa 6 Stylish Handmade BUBBLE Sofa Inspiring Cosiness by Sacha Lakic

    • design modern sofa
    • ideas modern sofa
    • modern sofa (2)
    • modern sofa (3)
    • modern sofa (5)
    • modern sofa (6)
    Recommended For You
    Bubble Chair Bubble Chair
    The Trio Sofa, Practical and Stylish The Trio Sofa, Practical and Stylish
    Transparent Glass Piggy Bank : Bubble Bank by Leon Ransmeier Transparent Glass Piggy Bank : Bubble Bank by Leon Ransmeier
    Bubble Lamps from Foscarini Bubble Lamps from Foscarini
    Transparent Ball Chair or Bubble Chair by Eero Aarnio Transparent Ball Chair or Bubble Chair by Eero Aarnio
    The Bubble Chair The Bubble Chair
    • Want more stuff like this?

      We’re on a mission to spread inspiring content far and wide.
      Try our daily email and see for yourself!

    By Lavinia in Furniture

    Tags:
    BUBBLE Sofa

    0 comments

    Why Neutral Colors Are Best

    10 Mistakes That (Almost) Everyone Makes in Interior Design

    How To Bring Japanese Simplicity Into Your Interiors

    30 Marble Bathroom Design Ideas Styling Up Your Private Daily Rituals

    What is a LEED Certified Home?

    Why You’ll Fall In Love With The Green Architecture Trend

    Why Neutral Colors Are Best

    Contemporary Split-Level House With Views of Downtown Seattle and Mt. Rainier

    Elegant and Light Infused Fully Renovated Villa in Belgium 

    How To Bring Japanese Simplicity Into Your Interiors

    40 Small Bedrooms Ideas To Make Your Home Look Bigger

    10 Mistakes That (Almost) Everyone Makes in Interior Design

    40 Small Bedrooms Ideas To Make Your Home Look Bigger

    30 Small and Functional Bathroom Design Ideas For Cozy Homes

    30 Creative Home Office Ideas: Working from Home in Style

    Live/Work Conversion Loft in San Francisco With Vaulted Concrete Ceilings

    40 Small Bedrooms Ideas To Make Your Home Look Bigger

    30 Small and Functional Bathroom Design Ideas For Cozy Homes

    10 Best Free Online Virtual Room Programs and Tools

    30 Best Small Apartment Designs Ideas Ever Presented on Freshome

    10 Mistakes That (Almost) Everyone Makes in Interior Design

    Freshome.com – Interior Design & Architecture Magazine

Lovely Concrete Hand Planters

Concrete-Hand-Planters

Concrete hand planters are a really fun and easy DIY weekend project for your garden. They even can be a lovely centerpiece decoration. Interesting! Bluefoxfarm has a simple picture tutorial so you can make your own.

All materials about this funny little project you need is:

some surgical gloves,
spatula for mixing concrete,
2 large buckets,
scissors,
Some succulent plants.

We also found another great tutorial for step by step instructions to making a concrete hand planter. concrete hands – studio50.ca

Share this article:

Pinterest
Amazing DIY, Interior & Home Design

Latest Ideas!