
Change Your Wall ‘Change it’ adıyla müsemma bir duvar dekorasyonu çünkü her dakikada bir rengi değişiyor. Amirko (Amirkhan Abdurakhmanov) tarafından tasarlanan bu konseptte 3 farklı renk seçenekleri var. Her bir üçgende bulunan beyaz, siyah ve gökkuşağı renkleriyle sınırsız kombinasyonlar yapmak mümkün. CONTEMPORIST CNC carpentry: the 'selfsupportingframework' Two students working on load-bearing systems in the architecture department at Kassel University, Mischa Proll and Andreas Günther, have taken advantage of the wide range of design techniques available and breathed new life into a one-hundred-year-old construction concept. The traditional reziprocal frame consists of short wooden joists, whose ends are carpentry-joined to a surface structure. With consistant types of profiles, lengths of elements and positions of the knots on the axises, a dome shape is created. The first documenting of such a framework, also called a „mandala roof“, dates back to the 12th century, according to the students' research, when a Buddhist monk by the name of Chogen created designs for temples, whose influence can still be seen today in the architecture of domes in China and Japan. The variation of individual parameters, for instance changing the join between two elements, leads to a change in all the other subsequent joins.
CubeMe vintage + modern design for kids and moms How cool are these? Gypsy Bowtop Caravans are built in Bristol (UK) by Greg Mort. In his words: “They gypsy caravans are produced at my workshop in Bristol. Volcania House Slide: A home with slides instead of stairs Going up and down stairs can be such a bore… which is why team of Japanese architects have created a house with slides instead of stairs.Level architects say they were given the brief of designing a family home which would give the children memories which would last forever. So after thinking about the challenge they decided to build an element of play into parts of the house which would otherwise just be there to perform a function, the stairs. The result is a three-storey family home in Nakameguro, Tokyo, which has stairs on one side and slides on the other.
The Tunnel House Dan Havel and Dean Ruck took two condemned homes and created a trippy work of art. Unfortunately, this fluctuation in the space-time continuum was itself demolished.