Showing posts with label Architecture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Architecture. Show all posts

Japan Dentist’s Office Modern Architecture Design

west elm furniture,interior design, furnitures, office interiorsJapan Dentist’s Office Modern Architecture Design
west elm furniture,interior design, furnitures, office interiorsJapan Dentist’s Office Modern Architecture Design
west elm furniture,interior design, furnitures, office interiorsJapan Dentist’s Office Modern Architecture Design
west elm furniture,interior design, furnitures, office interiorsJapan Dentist’s Office Modern Architecture DesignJapan Dentist’s Office Modern Architecture Design

This is a circuitous and its dental dispensary dentist’s residence, amid on a admirable acreage apple amidst by rice fields and acceptable orchard. A accurate bowl with 300 millimeters blubbery forms askew structure, which makes three shells and two accessible pages. And another lay in the shift, they face anniversary added on the plate.

Anniversary bark has altered functions in, housing, clinics and cat-and-mouse rooms. In anniversary folio of two bottle boxes set and acclimated as a point and entered the amplitude amid two adjoining shells. This dental dispensary is a abode that can animate bodies to go analysis his teeth, and an absorbing abode to visit.

Architecture by Meyer en Van Schooten




New presentation for the proposed Almelo City Hall in the Netherlands by Dutch Architects Meyer en Van Schooten. It certainly has the feel of the Babylonian styled hanging gardens minus the heavy stone work. Do you know of any city hall in the USA with this vast indoor atrium? Working for a Dutch city hall seems to be a dream job. The citizens of the Dutch town of Almelo have until February 6th 2010 to vote for or against it.



Babylon Hanging Gardens (600 B.C.)

Architecture by Anne Holtrop




A tower 2009 [model tower, scale 1:10]
Art project space ‘t Torentje, Almelo, Netherlands
Until March 4th, 2010

Concept for a tower by Dutch architect Anne Holtrop. We like the organic design which hints to the work of Finnish glass artist Alvar Aalto and German-French sculptor Jean Arp.

Space Age Interior


















The Illustrated Man, a very unusual movie from 1969, features a great space age interior set. What where they smoking? That's what you will think when you start this movie, but hang in there and you will be rewarded with this fantastic all-white modern sixties interior. The modern space age house of the future has a special virtual reality room in which people can transfer back (or forward) to any time. The movie has plenty psychedelic moments over a difficult to understand story line. A must-see cult icon for die hard space age fans. You can currently view the movie on Netflix "Play on Computer".

Great for fans of Eero Aarnio, Harry Bertoia, Wendell Castle, Joe Colombo, Curtis Jerre, Guzzini, Arne Jacobsen, Laurel, Erwin and Estelle Laverne, Ueli Berger and Eleanora Peduzzi Riva, Martinelli Luce, Neal Small, Olivier Mourgue, Eero Saarinen, Verner Panton, Space Age, Kartell, etc.

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Raymond Loewy Palm Springs House








Raymond Loewy House, Palm Springs, California, USA, Photographed by Peter Stackpole, for LIFE.

If you were close to Raymond Loewy and you were living in Palm Springs in the summer of 1947 you certainly had it made.

The Raymond Loewy House, 600 Panorama Road, Palm Springs, California, was designed by Palm Springs architect Albert Frey. Built in 1946-47 as a bachelor retreat and expanded later when Loewy got married, the house has been restored by metalware manufacturer Jim Gaudineer who said of the design, "When you slide open the glass walls, it's almost like living outdoors." A typical Palm Springs modernist villa with a low-slung pavilion and plenty of glass that provides striking views of desert, mountains, and the pool and garden that make the private oasis complete.

Space Age Japan Expo 1970





Amazing space age flying saucer shaped architecture. The organge structure was made by Hitachi to present the products of the future at Japan Expo 1970. The geodesic dome is the MIDORI-KAN Astrorama,a multi-dimensional world.



MIDORI-KAN Astrorama

Sound played a big role at EXPO 70. Back at EXPO 58 (Brussels) the Philips Pavilion (designed by le Corbusier) featured a "poemeelectronique" with "music" (actually a collage of many different sounds) composed by Edgard Varese. The recorded sound was directed through 425 loudspeakers according to a program that ensured that each performance was spatially different. At EXPO 70 the German Pavilion featured an auditorium housed within a 30m diameter geodesic sphere designed as an "electrical space-sound studio" incorporating various experimental techniques for "future concepts" of opera theaters and concert halls. The facilities included 500 loudspeakers and complex sound mixing and routing equipment.


As 1970 represented the 200th anniversary of Beethoven's birth, the space was used for live concerts and recorded music of both classical and modern composers. The most notable of the latter was Karl Heinz Stockhausen who personally conducted performances of his electronic compositions every day for several months of the EXPO. He used what he called a "sound mill" (rather like a hand coffee-grinder) where turning the handle directed sounds to different parts of the sphere.


Most pavilions wanted to ensure that as many visitors as possible could move through their exhibitions. This meant that if any kind of "show" was to be given, there had to be sufficient space for the audience; so, for example, if the target was 1,800 visitors per hour, a two minute show would need space for at least 60 viewers. The UK pavilion, which, like its predecessor at EXPO 67, made good use of audio-visual displays integrated into exhibition settings, was one of many to exploit the relatively new technique of multi-image projection using multiple electronically controlled slide projectors. The pavilion included a 16 screen (32 projector) display devoted to the arts, and featuring leading British artists, sculptors, architects and actors of the day; but to meet the visitor flow requirement it was only a few minutes long.


Many of the foreign exhibitors used multi-image slide technique. It was particularly suitable for relatively small pavilions like that of Ireland, which had a most engaging show based on excellent photography of the country. The Scandinavian Pavilion had a show using over 60 projectors, but unfortunately their clever ideas did not really work with the Japanese Public. Visitors were given a "fan" (in fact a white card) and if they held it correctly they could read projected captions on it that described the images on the overhead screens.

This approach could have worked well in an exhibition with few highly motivated visitors; but the Japanese visitors, mostly in organized groups with a flag-bearing leader setting the pace, simply did not have the time to work out what they were supposed to do.


EXPO 70 was really notable for the presence of the big Japanese corporate pavilions. Many of these worked on a "timed show" basis. While this allowed proper shows of some length to be given, it did limit the throughput of individual pavilions. Many of the pavilions were obviously inspired by the success of the multi-screen films that had been seen at EXPO 67, and were determined to go one better, with varying degrees of success.


Typical was the combined Toshiba and IHI Pavilion. Here 500 visitors at a time were loaded onto a circular platform that then rose 5.5m up into a 26m diameter theater space. An 18 minute film show was presented on nine screens, each 9m wide at base and 7.5m wide at the top. During the show, entitled "Light for Man", the audience platform rotated.


The Gas Pavilion had a multi-screen film show "symphony of laughter" shown on four screens to audiences of 380 at a time. The arrangement of a long narrow screen on the floor, two tall vertical screens and a conventional front screen was reminiscent of the "Labyrinth" pavilion seen three years before at EXPO 67. The Automobile Pavilion had a 35 minute four screen show called "240 hours a day", a humorous science fiction film presented on three screens side by side and a portrait format screen in the ceiling.


In 1969 Sony had developed the U-Matic range of videocassette based professional video recorders. Although tape is not ideal for exhibition presentation, and would have been very expensive at the time, it is clear that color video presentation was used at EXPO 70, for example the Telecommunications Pavilion is described as having 200 color TVs showing pictures of babies. It is not clear how many separate video sources were used, but it is at least probable that a number of early U-Matic machines were used (otherwise studio TV recorders or telecine machines would have been necessary; the alternative of lots of live babies on camera seems unlikely!).

The Telecommunications Pavilion demonstrated Japanese expertise in long distance communication by having "video telephones" demonstrated on giant TV screens. Live hook-ups to Tokyo, Kyoto and Japan's southernmost point, Tanegashima Island, were shown on giant projection screens -- a 13m*9m black and white image and two 6m*4m color images, all using the Swiss Eidophor projection system.

EXPO 70 was a true space age architectural dream world with many rewarding exhibits to see if you had the stamina. Each country had its own fashion dress code.


Modern Design home decorating with gallery photos

It’s always easier to decorate something starting from zero. While you present with such a blank room with no furniture in it, your imagination usually wander around, try to find ideas about how you should decorate it. However, not all people have the same opportunity to get a whole blank state of their room. They usually have a room which already decorated and wants to add something in it that could make it much more like the 20th century house. The wrong steps that people usually come up with while they want to decorating their house is buy something that they like without thinking about the composition of their house. It’s better for you to imagine what do you want your room to look like first before you jumped out and buy the furniture. After you get the image that you want, either from the magazine or TV, it’s time for you to do the shopping. The shopping itself is a bit tricky. Spend more, and you’ll have less money to get other things. You need to categorize your budget carefully. Make a list of what you want to add to your home decorating idea, and do the shopping based on it. If you see something that you like, which is not in your list, don’t buy it. You need to stick with your list so you could get the home decorating done exactly just like what you imagine before.


Home decorating ideas and techniques keep changing every year. What’s hot right now could be “yesterday” next year. There are so many reasons that caused the change of people taste in home decorating their houses. These reasons could be caused by the economy or financial condition, mode, and so on. For people who lack of money to do the interior design, they tend to buy cheaper furniture, like pine-wood which artificially grained, and combine it with a warm wallpaper. For people who keep following the interior design mode year after year, they keep updating their house depends on what’s hot right now. Between these two types of people, there is also another type that has the money, but prefers to do the home decorating their own way. They ignore the mode completely, and come up with new ideas instead. They picking the furniture depend on what they like and what mood that they want to feels in the certain room. While this is could be a little bit costly, the results usually amazing.


Still confuse about the interior design for your house? Why don’t you make up your house according to the country that you like? For example, if you like Japan, you may want to decorate your house in the minimalist style. Having a minimalist style will keep your house neat and make you easier to find things. This is one of the fastest things you could do to generate ideas. You could get unlimited ideas of interior design from just one country. Keep your internet access at hand so you could figure out the latest home decorating style in the country that you like and start working on your house. Combine some of them with your creativity, and you’ll get the house you dreamed of!

Fortunately, we've compiled a number of decorating ideas for home's interior, including the kitchen, dining room, bedroom, bathroom, home office, and auxiliary spaces such as the entranceway, hallways, and attic. We also have ideas for outdoor living spaces such as the deck and patio. And if you have kids, you'll want to see our articles on decorating for infants, toddlers, children and teens. The links below will take you to decorating ideas that will inspire your own creative designs. You just may end up with the home of your dreams! Every decorating style includes distinguishing elements: brass candlesticks and highboys, for instance, translate Colonial; curvaceous side chairs and wall-hung porcelain dishes speak to French provincial. If you're searching for a style, compile a list of favorite rooms. Maybe you like your grandmother's kitchen or a friend's library? What can you borrow from those rooms to forge your own perfect space? Finding a style that suits your lifestyle and setting doesn't mean starting over so don't panic. Furnishings are recyclable; heirlooms blend. The rigid rules of the past are gone. Have the style you want your way. Familiarizing yourself with popular modes of decoration will jump-start those creative juices.

Modern Design home decorating with gallery photosNice Design Minimalist furniture for modern livingroom Decoration

Interior design is the art to make your house looks more beautiful and express yourself freely. Some people prefer the description of interior design which says that it is the art of manipulating the spaces. You could make your house more spacious or narrow just by changing the angle of your furniture


Having a beautiful house is not complete if you don’t have beautiful interior designs. There are so many interior designs that you could choose nowadays and implement it to your house right away. Also, with the benefits of technology, you could maximize the experience to browse the hottest interior design of the year just by


This design for home a concept design modern interior as exterior with style decoration modern design. i think this design home decorating photos is very beautiful and cool.

 
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