Designer david trubridge green tech lights. ICFF 2012.
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Found at Wanted Design. Not LEDs but green tech by David Trubridge. Lights pack flat and made of recycled material.
<a href="about phil patton
Phil Patton is a contributing editor at Departures and Esquire magazines, a contributing writer at Wired and an automotive design writer for The New York Times. He was a regular contributor to The New York Times House and Home section and, in 1998, originated the “Public Eye” column. He has written many books including: Made in USA: The Secret History of the Things That Made America (Grove-Weidenfeld, 1992), which was named a New York Times notable book of the year; Bug: The Strange Mutations of the World's Most Famous Automobile (Simon & Schuster, 2002); Michael Graves Designs: The Art of the Everyday Object (Melcher, 2004); and Dreamland: Travels Inside the Secret World of Roswell and Area 51 (Villard, 1998). He has also written for Art in America, ARTnews, Connoisseur, Geo, Harper’s Bazaar, Men’s Journal, The New Republic, New York Magazine, The New York Times Book Review, Rolling Stone, Smithsonian, Travel + Leisure, Traveler, The Village Voice and Vogue. Patton was Editorial Consultant on the Guggenheim Museum’s “Motorcycle” show in 1998 and Consulting Curator for the “Different Roads” exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in 1999. In 2000 he was consultant and contributor for “On the Job: Design and the American Office” at the National Building Museum in Washington, D.C.
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Found at Wanted Design. Not LEDs but green tech by David Trubridge. Lights pack flat and made of recycled material.
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At Wanted Design in New York, installed in huge warehouse space on Eleventh Avenue, design students from the Rochester Institute of Technology stand displayed a clever lamp using LEDs, and recycled glass tubing. This in combination with Corning and the Vignelli Design Center at RIT. Also at Wanted, Todd Bracher and 3M offered a clever wall system of LEDs and reflectors with a Sixties, pop feel.
lightfalls | 3m architectural markets + todd bracher
csys task light | jake dyson
LEDs were also a theme at Javits Center: new models at Humanscale and by Peter Stathis were on view, as well as more from Konzept, the pioneers of affordable practical LED lamps. Jake Dyson’s CSYS LED tasklight has a subtle touch control for brightness and angle.
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Highway departments began to tolerate them after 9/11. Phillip March Jones collects them in his book Points of Departure: Roadside Memorial Polaroids.
“Roadside memorials mark geographical points of departure in a landscape
that is generally devoid of real human interaction or activity. We pass them at
sixty miles an hour, sometimes glancing back, but are never afforded the time
to actually see them. This project is about slowing down.” ~ Phillip March Jones
Wyatt Williams of [ Creative Loafing ] interviewed the author about his book.
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Sunset comes later than you think in March in Washington. The Mall was still full of people the other night when the images of Doug Aitken’s “Song 1” began to appear on the walls of the Hirshhorn Museum. The concrete drum of the building, designed by Gordon Bunshaft of Skidmore Owings Merrill in the late 1960s, disappeared beneath what is essentially an extended music video. Ordinary people in mundane locations—a diner, a factory, a car —sing the classic song, “I Only Have Eyes For You,” along with a few pros in clubs and bars. (The only person I recognized was actress Tilda Swinton.) It’s a kind of global karaoke.
The project is part of director Richard Koshalek’s effort to revitalize the Cold War bunker of the museum, set on the mall, with imaginative shows. He is redesigning it by addition and experiment. The tune was introduced in 1933 in a Busby Berkeley musical film and later made a hit by Peggy Lee and the Flamingoes. The building ends up disembodied and forgotten, but you can’t get the song out of your head. [ hirshhorn ]
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9th floor harold washington library, chicago | click > enlarge
Arthur Ross award winner: Hammond Beeby Rupert and Ainge Architects (HBRA), Chicago USA.
Whose civic and residential commissions demonstrate sensitivity to context, technical expertise, and creative artistry. On Monday, May 7, 2012, the University Club in New York City will once again be the venue to honor the 2012 Arthur Ross Award laureates. [ hbra ] [ institute of classical architecture and art ] [ university club nyc ]
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Freitag store –Swiss firm sells messenger bags recyled from old truck tarps, which it calls “freeway bags” on the Bowery across from the New Museum.
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The versatile designer Scott Henderson, who last year produced the Slat chair, is thinking bigger. He has designed a striking new concept for a yacht—inspired by a shark. Not necessarily designed for the ninety nine percent, but imaginative. Henderson did the vessel in response to an invitation from the UK publication Super Yacht Design. The 70 meter vessel is called Priona, after the scientific name of the Blue Shark. [ scott henderson ]
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Headphones are the design focus of the year: Urban Ears scored a first by establishing its own booth at gift fair. [ urban ears ]
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The fruit bowl is a new product in the Stelton Embrace series, which is characterized by the elegant, light and organic form language. [ stelton ]
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all-electric bmw i3 | click > enlarge
The new i3; BMW’s first series-produced all-electric car, was created for practical everyday driving. It focuses primarily on the drive-ability in urban settings and of course zero emissions. This may be the best of the all-electrics due out and looks to be out first.
prius c hybrid | click > enlarge
Toyota’s smallest Prius, the Prius C (think city) concept includes a 1.5-liter engine and 144-volt nickel metal hybrid battery. Toyota claims this car will offer up the highest mileage of any non-plug-in hybrid.
fusion hybrid | click > enlarge
The fusion is not only getting better, it’s getting greener by dropping all V-6 engines and instead adding a pair of greener sedans: a hybrid and plug-in-hybrid.
smart for us pickup | click > enlarge
Bonus: Smart For Us urban pickup truck is tiny, a two seater, zero emission, all-electric just over 11.5 feet long and under 5 feet wide. It will haul anything as long as it’s small.
[ more on bmw i3 ]
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