Category Archives: ARCHITECTURE

Contemporary Brown Desert Residence in Arizona

The city of Scottsdale, Arizona has been described by many as a desert version of Miami’s South Beach with plenty of late night partying all throughout the area, so it makes sense that such an incredible bachelor pad would reside in this desert town.

Designed by the team at Lake|Flato Architects, the Brown Residence is located on an expansive golf community, with incredible views offered through the entire dwelling thanks to the massive floor to ceiling windows. The backyard was designed for entertaining, equipped with a fire pit, swimming pool, and jacuzzi for taking in the scenic desert landscape.

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Home Sweet Home

Gramercy Park Townhouse by Fractal Construction.

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Tom Ford Sells His Home in London

Tom Ford has sold his home in London’s Mayfair neighborhood for an undisclosed price and is reportedly on the hunt for a new residence in England’s capital.

The designer bought the 8,222 square Georgian townhouse in 2004 for £5.75 million, or just over $9 million at current exchange. He tried to sell it in 2009 for £45 million — about $71 million in today’s money — but took it off the market when he didn’t find a buyer.

Now that he’s sold his Mayfair residence, he’s said to be looking for a house in London’s South Kensington area. Until he finds one, he has residences in Paris, New York, and New Mexico where he can stay.

Take a look at one of his other homes in London’s Chelsea neighborhood, a 3,700-square-foot home that a subsequent owner listed for £8.5 million (about $13.4 million) in 2009.

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Design Film Trilogy a limited-edition box set of Helvetica, Objectified & Urbanized

‘Design Film Trilogy’ limited-edition box set of all three Gary Hustwit directed documentary films (Helvetica/Objectified & Urbanized). The set consists of a cloth-bound slip-case, 3 disc-tray and 72 page signed book. The hardback book contains essays by Steven Heller and director Gary Hustwit, with behind-the-scenes photography of all three films. We devised a system of abbreviating each film (He-Helvetica/Ob-Objectified/Ur-Urbanized) giving the box set an individual identity in of itself. This marks the end of a great relationship with Gary and the studio, which started with Michael (Build’s Creative Director) being asked to be in Gary’s first documentary film ‘Helvetica’ (2007), then being asked to design identities/packaging for his next two films ‘Objectified’ (2009) & ‘Urbanized’ (2011). Client-Plexi Films. Year-2012.

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My favorite Art Gallery

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The Wythe Hotel in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, NY

Wythe Hotel started with the discovery of an old factory on the Brooklyn waterfront. Built in 1901 as a cooperage, we have preserved, renovated, and turned our historically industrial building into a place where people feel welcome.

80 Wythe Ave. at N. 11th Williamsburg, Brooklyn, NY 11249
P:718-460-8000  F:718-460-8001  hello@wythehotel.com

Click here for more information.

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The IKEA Premiere of UPPLEVA


The Times Of India Article –

IKEA is already the one-stop shop for smart and compact home furnishing. Now they are venturing into the world of technology-with theIKEA TV.

The new furniture range, named UPPLEVA the Swedish word for experience, integrates an LED TV, a sound system with wireless bass speakers, an internet connection and CD, DVD and Blu-ray players-all in one self-assembly piece.

Although the TV and the other electronics are made by Chinese manufacturer TCL, IKEA has built everything around them, hiding the masses of cables that can be a nuisance and make a living room look shabby.

To further simplify things, IKEA and TCL have combined all the controls into a single remote. The furniture surface is especially designed to allow the remote’s signals through, so the devices can remain hidden from view.

The TV screens are available in four different sizes, from 24 inches (60 centimeters) to 46 inches (117 centimeters), and in a range of colors including gray, black and blue. Users are also able to plug in their iPods or other MP3 music players.

Like most IKEA furniture, the UPPLEVA is purchased in a flat-pack and is ready for assembly at home for those handy with screwdrivers and other tools.

The furniture comes in three designs and will be sold first in Sweden, France, Poland, Germany and Italy in June, with a few more marketsdue to launch in the second half of the year. By the first half of next year, it will be available worldwide, with the cheapest costing about 6,500 Swedish kronor ($955).

To test market appetite for its latest innovation, IKEA had a survey conducted by pollster YouGov. The poll showed that three out of four people want less visible cables in their living rooms and 50 percent wanted to reduce the amount of electronics lying about.

The study, done in five countries with more than 5,200 respondents between Feb. 29 and March 15 this year, also showed that 60 percent of the people asked have between three to four remote controls at home.

“We’ve realized that people are watching more TV and are using electronics in their living rooms more and more,” IKEA spokeswoman Ylva Magnusson said. “We came up with this because we found that people want to get rid of the cables and they don’t want those mountains of remote controls either.”

Martin Rask, a 38-year old from Stockholm, said the all-in-one concept sounded interesting but wondered how it could keep up with new technologies.

“The furniture is a tempting idea-I’m wrestling with a bundle of cables at home myself at the moment-but the problem is that so many new things are released all the time,” he said. “I’ve had three different Internet suppliers in the past year for example, and imagine if you had an old VHS player built into your furniture that no one is watching.”

Magnusson at IKEA said that although the electronic devices are physically attached to the furniture, there is plenty of room for customers to put in IKEA-designed add-ons.

IKEA employs more than 130,000 people and has 280 stores in 25 countries. Last year it drew 655 million customers.

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Pharrell Williams Presents: i am OTHER

Pharrell Williams introduces i am OTHER and talks about his vision behind the brand.

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House in Kitasando with Built-In Skate Bowl

Check this cleverly designed home in the neighborhood of Shibuya, Tokyo. Particularly with this built-in skate bowl on the ground floor. The house has been designed by Level Architects. Only in Japan!

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Dubai Water Discus Underwater Hotel

I remember as a kid only seeing these kind of places in sci-fi movies and cartoons. Now it’s a reality as Dubai will soon begin construction of a hotel with submerged, underwater rooms. The design is by Deep Ocean Technology and named the Water Discus Hotel

The building will be the first of several in the emirate and will feature an underwater section of 21 rooms, a dive center and bar up to 10 meters below the sea’s surface. A unique lighting system will illuminate the scene outside the submerged rooms’ windows while macro photography will also allows guests to zoom in on the surroundings for a better view. With the above-water portions of the hotel suspended high enough to avoid tsunamis and flooding, the underwater disc is engineered to surface in the event of a storm or other danger.

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KAWS: “The Nature of Need” Interview

Hypebeast Interview –

What exactly is the theme of your latest “The Nature of Need” exhibition in Hong Kong?

It’s not exactly a theme, but more a continuation of the painting series that I’ve been doing. I wanted to do a show that just focuses on painting this time. I think I’ve been wanting to do these vertical paintings for a while. I did some when I did the Aldrich show in 2010. I had one painting that was seven feet tall by one foot wide. If it wasn’t for doing that mural I would have never considered that composition; but after doing it, it has just been on my mind to do a strong series of them. Seeing this space, I thought it would a good time to pair this, so it’s like an installation or they can exist on their own.

You currently have “Down Time” running in Atlanta and now you’re opening in Hong Kong again. Does the geographic location of where you are showing ever factor in or influence what you are going to paint?

No, I don’t really think geographic locations have anything to do with it. The work I am going to make is the work I am going to make. A lot of times when installing the work, I respond to the architecture of the space and I pay attention to the individual paintings. I also want to think about when somebody walks into the space that it’s not just them with that one image. You have to consider everything in their peripherals.

Did you see the Galerie Perrotin space prior to coming to Hong Kong?

No, this finished space was just completed; but I had a model made in my studio for about six months. Coming here earlier in the past two months kinda simulated things and I could make a pretty exact replica of what the show would be, before I even walked into it.

How do you think your personality is reflected in your artwork? Or is there a disconnection at all?

There’s definitely a connection. I mean, it’s just sort of the work I’m making at the time or getting a feel for the kind of the mood I am at during the time. Like if there are periods in life that are chaotic, this will be reflected to some degree in my work.

How do you approach other projects with companies and collaborators? What is the connection between your personal work and other work?

If I am approached or if there is an opportunity to do a collaboration with a company, the projects I make at that time have to align with my personal work at the time. So, it is actually that when the “other” work comes in, it sort of falls within those parameters of what my personal work is during that period. Whereas with this work for “The Nature of Need,” it’s just what I am making as a sort of growth and progression from my past personal work. For projects like Ikepod or Hennessy the best way to treat collaborations and projects like that is to do exactly as I am doing at that time and it always seems fresh for me. It’s always a way to sort of maintain interest in what I am doing – regardless of what the project is. I get requested all the time to do something specific, like something I was doing 10 years ago. That doesn’t interest me, because I always strive to continuously grow and progress.

Is there ever a process where you actually reach out and want to do a project with a brand or company or is it always a one-way direction with them approaching you?

As far as the commercial sort of collaborations, there’s some I want to do such as the toys and OriginalFake products. But, there are some times when we may reach out to Disney or Warner Bros. – I actually have one project coming up with a company and I actually had to go out and talk to them and explain my interest. But, a lot of times for projects like Hennessy or Ikepod, it just sort of happens naturally or they approach me. It has to make sense to me and the work.

Your works often possess a high level of  technical aspect of the shading, the proportions, and perspective. It seems like brush strokes are nearly impossible to see and the nuances are few and far between. What is something you are most proud of in terms of your technical skill when it comes to painting?

Well – to say that “I am most proud of this” sounds kind of corny (laughs). But, I have been painting my whole life. I truly enjoy painting and I worked hard so I can be in a position to paint. When I am painting, it’s a really good time for me. I can zone out on most other things in life and can just be in the studio and focus. I did make it a point in recent years to begin trying to do more exhibitions as a way to get my paintings in front of people. Because, you can make something look so good in a print magazine or online using vectors and other things like that; but people can assume that that is all there is to it and it’s just manufactured. It’s only when you are right in front of a painting that you see that everything is actually done by hand – there’s no masking, it is actually shaky in some places and there are some subtle nuances that are unavoidable. I aim to make something as straight as possible of course, but in the end, it’s going to be a little fucked up in some places – but, that’s the quality I like.

You seem really hands-on with all the work, even down to the day of the gallery actually hanging pieces and helping out with the setup. How important is this process for you and making sure things come out true to your vision?

(Laughs) I don’t know if that is a good thing or a bad thing! But, no – I mean I wouldn’t take so long making a painting and then just go and let people do whatever with it, you know? But, I also believe that “true to your vision” doesn’t necessarily mean that you need to be hands-on with everything. I know there are plenty of artists that operate with large studios and maybe not even ever touch their paintings; but their paintings are still true to their vision. I don’t think there is a right or wrong way to do it. I have two assistants that help me paint and fill in. There’s things that they can do that I don’t need to be doing. I don’t need to be painting the same white square 15 times in a row — a lot the colors you see are bright like that because it is painted over and over in the same shade. The same way that I’m not at the factory making each one of my toys, but they are exactly what I want so it’s just a matter of figuring out what’s possible and what you need help in. I try to find a balance where, yes, of course I want to control the painting and have it come out exactly as I want but no, I don’t want to spend the entire time doing something that I can easily allocate to somebody who is competent.

So I guess for a lot of artist who have become successful as a business per se, do you find you have had to develop a certain business sense along the years?

It’s not that I felt I had to develop it. My business has grown organically and over a long period of time so I had a long time to really figure things out along the way. The best way to learn is to just get burned. Once you get burned over and over, these red flags go up so that when a situation is in front of you, you are seeing the burn potential before they open their mouth. That to me is the best way to do it, just throw yourself into the fire and in the end it’s just art and designing shit. Nobody is trying to kill you. So there’s nothing that can happen that’s too bad.

Do you feel you have any limitations right now?

Not really. It’s sort of like what I was just saying before. What are the consequences to trying? I could fuck up really bad and lose my savings and I’d be broke. Big deal. I’m not a flashy person so I can easily go back to zero and work my way back up, it doesn’t scare me.

You’re in Hong Kong right now for “The Nature of Need.” The city has seen so many big galleries open up here recently. What are your thoughts on how these big galleries will hopefully enhance the level of art in the region, or do you think it won’t have an affect at all?

I hope it will have an effect. You can’t really depict what will happen but it’s great for kids to have that option — to go to a gallery like Perrotin and see a whole roster of French artists, artists from Japan, artists from New York, and the more and more that these options are placed with these new galleries opening up, the more people can make a choice. If they want to see it, now they can. Whereas before, if they wanted to see it, they couldn’t. I think it’s a positive step.

I think that there’s always been this pretension that has surrounded art, but for Hypebeast, we cover all spectrums because we feel it’s all worth knowing, and it’s up to you to decide. But, I think that’s something that you can really appreciate about the Perrotin space –  You don’t really need to be a guy that knows this art history, it’s more for the consumer.

For me as an artist and having my background, and having the various channels I’ve worked in — somebody could just come to the gallery knowing some specifics from my work, but then see a Kaz Oshiro piece in the other room, and then slowly follow that rabbit hole and start to learn about his work. And it’s the same thing when I go see an artist: you learn a little bit about them and what their peer group was and you start getting curious. “Oh if they were both painting in the sixties in the city, who else was with them cause I’m into this?” I think it’s the same with anything, like music for example. You find out about musicians and you learn from their associations, and it’s the same with art galleries.

When it comes to being under Perrotin’s roster of an eclectic mix of artists, do you have to entrust them to curate you properly? Is there any trust issues when being represented by them, and being placed next to any other artists within that roster?

I think that’s something you have to think about as an artist. I like working with Emmanuel because he does have a really diverse program. And it’s better than being with an artist that only shows people who paint blue or something like that. You can definitely find these niches that I try to avoid. But it’s the same thing with working. I feel that there are people that know me as a toy designer and will only think of me as a toy designer, or a graffiti artist or a street artist. Yet, throughout all those phases, I could care less about carrying the flag for this movement or that movement. I’m more thinking about the work I want to make and getting the work out. So even now with me doing this show I don’t want to be thought of as a gallery artist. I’d rather them say this is a project he did, and he can do this, or work in this way.

KAWS with Sam Lee

Takashi & architect Andre Fu who designed the Galerie

Maurizio Cattelan chocking out Emmanuel

TK with Young Kim

Hilary Tsui & KAWS

KAWS, Emmanuel & Edison Chen

Alice & Fiona Xie with Edward Tang

Janice Man

Hearts Revolution

Diana Darenberg

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Rayavadee Resort in Thailand

Rayavadee Resort is an exclusive, luxury five-star resort on the tropical peninsula of PhraNang in the spectacular and peaceful Marine National Park of Krabi, Thailand. The resort is surrounded by breathtaking natural beauty, it nestles discreetly amidst tropical gardens and coconut groves against a back of sheer cliffs, lush jungle foliage and the clear waters of the Andaman Sea.

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Dissecting Creativity with Pharrell Williams Part 1


As Pharrell Williams touched down in Hong Kong last week to attend Carrera Presents Liberatum Hong Kong International Festival of Culture, the multi-faceted creative had a chance to sit down with HBTV amidst the pre-opening for Galerie Emmanuel Perrotin Hong Kong to converse about his personal interest in art as well as his creative process. With a resume that spans a vast range of creative mediums from music, film scoring, industrial design, sound design, and fashion design, Pharrell is one of the few individuals who are able to balance a diversity of projects while seamlessly maintaining consistency in his own identity as each endeavor unfolds. In our first colloquial dialogue with Pharrell — of which there will be an eventual two parts — he touches on everything from art, managing projects, his thoughts on the difference of American and Asian cuisine as well as sharing memories from his past experiences with NIGO.

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Virgin Atlantic Airways Upper Class Bar and Cabin by VW+BS Studio

This spring, the first virgin atlantic airways A330 flight took off from london to new york, featuring a brand new bar and cabin, offering passengers a new experience when up 30 000 feet in the air. The design has been developed by the international VW + BS studio in partnership with the virgin atlantic team. 

Four years ago, VW + BS were approached by virgin with a test brief to see what they could do if they had a free hand to redesign one of their planes. They researched the changing trends in travel and hospitality to produce an intelligence report that could form a reference for the client, and determine how these new ideas could be incorporated on board an aircraft. the existing product that was introduced in 2003 remained a market leader, but trends in travel were changing and virgin was determined to be the industry innovator. from the test project VW + BS went on to develop the real thing. the brief was very ambitious: to create an exciting and engaging social space for passengers, while meeting an immense technical requirement of a wide bodied plane with the strictest safety regulations.

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Wish I was here.

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Wish I was here…

Neuschwanstein Castle, Germany.

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Monocle Magazine: Neighbourhood Sheung Wan

Sheung Wan is one of the oldest neighbourhoods in Hong Kong, and with its old low-rise buildings and ancient printing presses it’s a place where the past has largely survived. It’s now also home to a growing influx of international designers, new boutiques, cafés and more. Monocle visits to find out whether this delicate balance of old and new – the source of the area’s distinctive character – can last in a city like Hong Kong where property development is rampant and rents are skyrocketing.

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Street artist Filthy Lurker

Filthy Lurker – artist, literally attacking the audience with his art. This is such a clever simple idea. The visual effect is so cool and playful.

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Hippopotamus Table

This hippo table by artist Mark Stoddart.

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Wish I was here

Ta Prohm Temple, Cambodia.

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