Where do architects and designers get inspiration? When creatives are in search of architectural inspiration, they can take cues from literally any aspect of culture – even a favourite movie. The featured projects have been informed by well-known science fiction motion pictures and brilliantly designed through meticulous deconstruction of their sets and scenography.
Month: March 2021
Research shows that building sector accounts for 30-40% of total waste worldwide, which makes construction waste a pressing issue all over the globe. Generated throughout the project from the pre-construction stage to finishing stage, it has adverse effects on environment, economy and social aspects. It takes up space in landfills and reduces soil quality and air quality even when properly disposed. In an attempt to cut down the number of resources that are wasted and find opportunities for them to be used, product designers upcycle discarded industrial waste into innovative extraordinary objects applicable for everyday use.
A cinema building is not a mere box where screenings take place. Setting scene for what is going on on the screen, architecture opens a dialogue with cinema as discipline. The cinema design has been reimagined over the span of the last ten years, evolving to house more screens, new amenities and diverse programs.
Japanese cuisine is constantly ranked as one of the top ten best cuisines in the world. With its aesthetic of beautifully presented food and the use of fresh, high-quality seasonal ingredients, it is no wonder that sushi is so highly prized by people around the world. Using modern technology and own creativity, featured designers and food artists transform this Japanese delicacy into a sophisticated work of art.
Since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic, not knowing how to dress is probably the least of anyone’s problems. Fashion designers have attempted to explore the whole spectre of controversial mindsets, conditions and feelings that people had to face during these turbulent times.
The coronavirus outbreak has forced people around the globe to wear personal protective equipment (PPE) on a daily basis. Prioritizing safety, we forget about the environment. The result is the frightening statistics showing that 129 billion face masks have been discarded every month since the start of the pandemic. Estimates suggest that around 75 per cent of these will end up in landfill or ocean, where over the course of around 450 years they will break down into microplastics. To address this issue, designers offer ingenuous ways of recycling used PPE into something meaningful.
Food is an important part of our life, regardless of culture. From childhood, many of us associate food with warm feelings and good memories. Inspired by a special and personal value food may hold, artists use their talent and creativity to recreate delicacies and groceries in the most unexpected materials, from felt to stone. These fantastic renditions are so amazingly lifelike it is hard to believe they cannot be eaten.
Reportedly, 92 million tons of textile waste are generated by the fashion industry every year. Wearing vintage and second-hand is great but the next big trend in sustainable fashion is making clothing out of discarded items. Frustrated with the excessive use of the world’s natural resources, and the amount of waste produced worldwide, young fashion designers choose to create unconventional garments out of reclaimed materials, turning waste into something new.
Rebounding craze of the early 1980s is long gone, but there is still an ongoing debate about the health benefits trampoline can offer. While pro-bouncers cite the NASA research showing that physical output was greater from jumping on a trampoline than running, others claim that rebound exercise is aerobically mild. Whoever is right, the fact is true that although a trampoline looks like a toy, it comprises a gravity-generating device and offers a mood-boosting experience. That is probably why designers readily include this bouncing gear into their projects.