May 2015 - WantedDesign
Transcription
May 2015 - WantedDesign
Meet the Architonic Team and learn more about our services for manufacturers, retailers, agents, architects and designers. LEVEL 1 | STAND 1200 ARCHITONIC GUIDE NEW YORK 2015 ICFF WANTEDDESIGN DESIGNJUNCTION EDIT CITY EVENTS MAY 15–19 The Architonic Guide allows you to find the best exhibitors quickly. Architonic’s selection is purely an editorial one and is limited to high-end manufacturers whose products are relevant to the design of buildings and spaces. It’s a guide by architects for architects. ARCHITONIC.COM OVERVIEW PLAN ICFF page 4–9 booth page 2524 1978 1271 2051 859 849 2557 2456 2548 1900 1818 840 1970 1752 956 1939 1018 1232 1680 884 1200 2156 2204 2052 1004 2340 962 2212 1226 5 9 8 9 8 8 9 9 9 5 5 4 9 9 8 5 4 4 8 8 4 9 5 9 4 5 8 5 4 1762 2633 2144 2122 1523 1604 1804 1675 1552 2536 1412 2039 9 2540 2262 2166 1162 2332 5 9 9 8 5 A A Little Weather A‘a Glass Aelfie Aimee Wilder Designs AJK AlexAllen Studio Alice Tacheny Design Alicia Adams Alpaca Allied Maker Alphenberg Amuneal Andrea Claire Studio Andrew Neyer Anglepoise Anna Karlin Anne Kyyrö Quinn Antolini Luigi Apparatus Studio Arch Design Tile & Stone Archilume Architonic Areaware Artifort Artistic Tile Arturo Alvarez Astek Wallcovering Atelier de Troupe Atelier Vierkant Axo Light B B+N Industries Bain Ultra Bec Brittain Bend Goods Bensen Bernhardt Design Bocci Bonnsu Branca Lisboa Brendan Ravenhill Studio Brizo BuzziSpace 5 5 4 4 5 8 8 5 4 5 C Calico Wallpaper Cc-tapis Chemetal Christian Woo Cielo WANTEDDESIGN page 15 MANHATTAN A-form Alcantara Bellboy David Turbridge DLV Driade Design Within Reach Felturn Foscarini CITY EVENTS page 20–21 A Allermuir Architonic Speakeasy Arclinea Artek Artemide AVO Axor B B&B Italia BDDW 2 Bisazza Boffi Bulthaup C Capdell Cappellini Cassina Chen-Chen Colony D David Weeks Studio ALPHABET CoolKids Company Cosmopolitan Glass Council Country Floors CTO Lighting Curio booth page 2221 808 1304 2273 1952 824 5 4 4 9 9 4 853 923 1047 1054 2344 2080 1505 862 1040 1986 1248 858 1724 1987 8 4 8 8 5 9 4 8 4 9 8 8 5 9 2036 2608 1732 1648 1274 2236 1208 5 2126 1122 1032 2462 1153 1471 2022 2278 2537 5 4 4 9 8 8 5 9 5 1340 1348 1744 803 2546 4 8 5 4 9 2108 1451 1904 5 8 5 Hennepin Made High Style Hollis + Morris Jacuzzi James De Wulf Jan Kath Jeff Goodman Studio Jill Malek Juju Papers 2934 2118 1653 2175 847 831 5 8 9 4 4 Nasiri Carpets Naula Neutra US Niche Modern Nolen Niu Nourison Now Carpets Nud Collection Nyta @ Ameico page 804 1456 2554 4 8 9 2439 2218 1766 1336 1718 2252 1213 1862 2504 5 5 9 4 5 9 4 9 5 1918 857 1411 5 8 4 1632 2937 1136 1926 Oasiq Objeti Onecollection 4 Pablo Pelle Phase Design Phloem Studio Pioneer Millworks Pletz @ David Gaynor Plumen Precious Pieces Purificare-US 4 5 La Castellamonte Lacava Lambert et Fils Studio Lasvit Laufen Lea Ceramiche Leff Lefroy Brooks Lights Up! Lindsey Adelman Lindstrom Rugs Liza Phillips Design Lobmeyr Loll Design Louis Poulsen Luxxbox 3016 1126 2815 1660 2112 1425 855 2104 813 1848 1048 2430 1632 2226 1470 1773 4 8 5 4 8 5 4 9 8 5 4 5 8 8 M2L Malene B Mater Materia Designs Meljac Michael Robbins Michele Varian Miles & May MIO 2000, 2204 939 2266 1462 2280 2553 1036 2444 1400 1808 5 1144 4 1332 4 868 8 2520 5 1047 8 1256 8 839 4 1972 9 R RAD Furniture 833 Reflect+ by Deknudt Mirrors 1505 Resident 2026 Rich Brilliant Willing 1826 4 4 5 5 Samuel Heath Scala Luxury Secto Design Seeddesign Shakuff Siemon + Salazar Sifas Simon Pearce Skargaarden Skram Souda Spark modern fires StonePeak Suite NY Sun Valley Bronze Sustainable Materials 5 4 9 8 9 9 4 5 4 Tabu Teuco THG Tibetano Tjokeefe Tokio Tom Dixon Townsend Design Trove Tuuci Twenty2 Two.Six Uhuru page 1350 1326 2825 2240 1856 2182 1318 1940 2006 1306 2319 2542 8 4 1448 8 1944 1662 1704 2453 5 8 5 9 1466 2253 2220 2805 1266 2248 1132 1962 2207 1125 8 9 5 5 9 9 4 5 5 4 5 9 V Victoria + Albert Baths Vin de Garde Vitra Volk Furniture W Walker Zanger Walking On Wood Watermark Wetstyle Wetstyle Wilsonart Wolf Gordon Workstead Wrap & Weft Würd Furniture Design 1548 1066 932 1154 1370 948 2004 2809 936 1910 2123 861 1138 2607 1258 1676 8 8 4 8 8 8 5 8 9 4 9 5 4 X XPZ S M booth T U O L 5 8 8 5 4 booth P Kalmar Keuco Khouri Guzman Bunce Koncept Technologies H Harbour Outdoor Hearth Cabinet Heller 4 5 5 4 8 8 K G Galanter & Jones Gessi Getama Grain Grow House Grow 843 1836 2432 1043 1166 1775 Molo Montis Moonish J F Fantini Fermob Flavor Paper Forbes & Lomax Franke Franz Viegener Fritz Hansen Frost Fusion Glass Designs 8 4 5 N Iacoli & McAllister ICF Iglooplay Inigo Elizalde Rugs Interlam Italgraniti E Effegibi Ellisha Alexina Emeco Ercol Esaila Eskayel Estiluz page 1062 1344 2337 I D Daniel Levy Porcelain David Edward David Gaynor Design DBA Easy Drain USA De Castelli De Jong & Co Deknudt Mirrors Design by them Dform Dino Sanchez Dornbracht Dunn Duravit Dzierlenga F + U booth 2932 Y York Wallcovering 1980 9 1551 940 8 4 Z Zia Priven Zieta 4 5 5 8 4 8 8 DESIGNJUNCTION EDIT page 19 Graypants Gufram Horm.IT Jake Dyson Kontextur Ddc Dedon Dornbracht Dune DuPont Corian Duravit DWR NYC Menu Moroso Seletti Token Urbancase BROOKLYN Flavor Paper USM Areaware Bellboy Flexform Flou Fontana Arte Foscarini Fritz Hansen J Moroso Jan Kath P K G L Poggenpohl Poliform Poltrona Frau Promemoria Espasso Gabriel Scott Gandia Blasco Giorgetti F I Farrah Sit Ingo Maurer E USM Kartell Kvadrat Laufen Luceplan R M S M2L Molteni&C Roll&Hill SieMatic Colé Massproductions Tokyobike Decode Melin Tregwynt Very Good & Proper H Furniture Modus Warli Imamura Muuto Sight Unseen Offsite Snaidero Suite NY Vitra Z Zanotta T Tai Ping U Uhuru Design USM V Valli&Valli This list was printed on April 24th, 2015. We apologise sincerely if we have omitted or misplaced any top-quality manufacturers. 3 NEWS Architonic NY square ad_Layout 1 MOLO | 804 PELLE | 1144 ICFF ERCOL | 1648 Dform 1240 StonePeak 1640 High Style Galanter & Jones Michele Varian 1630 1430 1330 Teuco 1320 Lacava Fermob 1620 1520 1120 1020 Antolini Luigi 920 Cosmopolitan Glass 1130 1030 David Edward 930 830 820 Curio Apparatus Studio 1230 Wolf Gordon Flavor Paper 1220 Juju Papers Lights Up! 1140 Inigo Elizalde Rugs Originals studio couch 1340 Egsu Dining Table 1040 Andrea Claire Studio 940 Iacoli& Malene B RAD Furniture McAllister Precious Pieces Jill Malek 840 Cantilever paper table Würd Furniture Design ADVERTISEMENT BOOTHS 08xx–16xx Brizo 1104 1204 1304 11xx 12xx 13xx 16xx 1004 10xx 1505 904 09xx 14xx 804 08xx Council 1604 Tuuci Grain MIO ENTRANCE 1C ENTRANCE 1B Meet the Architonic Team and learn more about our services for manufacturers, retailers, agents, architects and designers. LEVEL 1 | STAND 1200 ICFF New York 16 - 19 May Booth 1648 4 ADVERTISEMENT E ICFF RESIDENT | 2026 ALPHENBERG | 1900 BOOTHS 17xx–25xx BuzziFalls Pick Up Sticks Chair & Fibre Light- Funnel Eskayel Eskayel 2440 2240 Calico Wallpaper Brendan Astek Ravenhill Wallcovering Studio Designs Tibetano Nasiri Carpets Hollis + Fusion Morris Glass ICFICF 2140 2240 Tibetano Miles & May Astek Wallcovering Hollis + Morris 2140 Bec Brittain 2140 1940 1940 1840 Bec Brittain 2340 18/04/15 07.23 Townsend Design 1840 Victoria Victoria + Albert + Albert Baths Baths Townsend Design Getama Getama 1740 1740 Alphenberg leather RUGS.indd 1 2140 NEWS ADVERTISEMENT BUZZISPACE | 2039 Nasiri Carpets Iglooplay Fantini Koncept Koncept Technologies Technologies Liza Phillips Design Fantini Wrap & Weft Harbour Outdoor Sifas Lefroy Brooks Wrap & Weft Harbour Outdoor Sifas Trove Twenty2 2404 2501 2204 24xx 25xx 2104 2204 22xx 2004 2104 21xx 1904 2004 20xx 1904 Lefroy Brooks ENTRANCE 1A B o o t h ADVERTISEMENT 2520 2260 2420 2120 Atelier Vierkant Atelier Vierkant Trove Pioneer Millworks Heller 19xx 1804 18xx 1804 1704 1704 17xx James De Wulf Watermark BRITISH EUROPE DESIGN GROUP James De Wulf Heller CoolKids Company 2260 2020 Souda NolenNolen NiuNiu ENTRANCE ENTRANCE 1B 1B Bend Goods Watermark Twenty2 Souda Amuneal Amuneal 2120 2020 1920 1920 1820 1820 1720 1720 A Little Weather Bend CoolKids Goods Company ENTRAN # 1 9 0 0 5 extra-ordinary JASPER MORRISON Stand #1732 ® ICFF BOOTHS 08xx–16xx 1680 1680 1580 1580 1480 1480 1380 1380 1280 1080 1280 980 880 1080 Archilume Arch Arch Design Design Tile Tile &&Stone Stone Italgraniti Italgraniti Franz Viegener Materia Designs Materia Designs Luxxbox Luxxbox 1660 1660 Walker Zanger 1560 Walker Zanger 1560 Bonnsu Bonnsu 1460 1460 1360 Christian Woo 1260 Wetstyle 1360 1160 1260 Christian Atelier de Troupe WooHennepin Made Shakuff Shakuff Esaila Scala Luxury Wetstyle Interlam 1060 960 Design Made Hennepin by them Interlam 1160 860 1060 Objeti Scala Luxury Phloem Studio Spark modern fires de Troupe Aelfie ICFF BAR Esaila Franz Viegener Aelfie ICFF BAR Sustainable Sustainable Materials Materials Vin Vin dede Garde Garde 8 Branca Lisboa Hearth Cabinet 1550 1650 1650 15xx 16xx 1550 1450 Samuel Samuel Heath Heath 14xx 1350 13xx Product Design Sieger Design 1450 1250 1350 Gessi 12xx 1150 Gessi 11xx 1250 1050 dornbrachtam@dornbrachtgroup.com Lasvit Lasvit Zia Priven Zia Priven Plumen Lindstrom Rugs Branca Lisboa Sun Valley Bronze Plumen 10xx 950 09xx Sun Valley Bronze Franke Hearth Cabinet Anna Karlin 850 1150 Lindstrom Rugs Siemon + Salazar Franke dornbracht.com/cl.1 DBA Easy Drain Dunn 08xx 1050 AlexAllen Studio Daniel Levy Porcelain Leff DBA Easy Drain AJK Novelty CL.1 presented at ICFF, booth 1248 ADVERTISEMENT ICFF BOOTHS 17xx–25xx De De Jong Jong& &Co Co 2180 2180 2080 2080 York Wallcovering York Wallcovering 1880 1880 Dino Sanchez Dino Sanchez Dzierlenga Dzierlenga F+UF+U Meljac Meljac Frost Frost A‘a Glass A‘a Glass Purificare-US Purificare-US AndrewAndrew Neyer Neyer Country Country Floors Floors Jeff Jeff Goodman Goodman Studio Studio Michael Robbins Allied Grow House 2460 2560 Moonish Alicia Adams Alpaca Michael Robbins 2450 Two.Six 2350 2450 24xx 2350 23xx 2250 22xx 22xx 2050 2050 20xx 2250 1950 19xx 1950 1850 Wilsonart Wilsonart 18xx 1850 1750 17xx Forbes & Lomax Alicia Adams Alpaca Nourison Nourison 1750 Forbes & Lomax Volk Furniture Walking Walking On On Wood Wood Lindsey Adelman Lindsey Adelman Alice Tacheny Design Allied Maker Artistic ArtisticTile Tile Volk Furniture Alice Tacheny Design Grow House Grow Areaware Areaware Aimee Wilder Designs CTO Lighting Tjokeefe CTO Lighting Tjokeefe Aimee Wilder Designs B+N Industries B+N Industries 2560 2460 2260 2260 2160 2160 2060 2060 1960 Nud Collection Nud Collection 1960 1850 1850 1760 1760 Chemetal Chemetal ARCHITONIC JOB SCOUT For the best brains at the intersection of business and creation. ADVERTISEMENT jobs.architonic.com 9 MADE IN BROOKLYN: THE CREATIVES PUTTING THE NEW YORK BOROUGH ON THE DESIGN MAP Text: Dominic Lutyens Brooklyn is only a short distance from Manhattan yet it has its own, highly distinctive identity. Talk to Brooklyn’s tight-knit but burgeoning community of designer-makers and you get the impression that this New York borough is widely seen as more romantic, bohemian, less overtly worldly than the more commerce-focused Manhattan. Yet it’s also easy to exaggerate the differences between these two creative hubs. After all, Brooklyn’s new generation of designers are, in their own way, highly ambitious and entrepreneurial. Even so, the ethos of their businesses is more leftfield, possibly more laid-back than those of Manhattan. Comparatively leafy Brooklyn is generally seen as a gentler place, albeit one teeming, like never before, with industrious creatives working in a multitude of fields. ‘Brooklyn has an energy that springs from all types of talented people,’ say Jean and Oliver Pelle, who, in 2011, set up their lighting and furniture design studio Pelle in Red Hook, western Brooklyn, a port area that boasts a high concentration of designers. ‘There’s a big entrepreneurial spirit, a groundswell of activity in one spot – designers, restaurateurs, beekeepers making honey on rooftops.’ ‘There are all kinds of industries here,’ concur Jason Horvath and Bill Hilgendorf of design studio Uhuru, which is ‘dedicated to sustainability and local craftsmanship’. Its Coney Island furniture is fashioned from the eponymous Brooklyn peninsula’s demolished, weathered boardwalk, originally installed in the 40s. ‘People are brewing beer, designing wallpaper, lighting, you name it... It’s amazing.’ There are many advantages to being Brooklyn-based, many designers point out. For starters, there’s its strong community spirit: many creatives know each other, help each other out and sometimes collaborate. Traditionally, Brooklyn’s main economy was manufacturing, but in the mid-70s this shifted to a mainly service-based one. Yet an infrastructure of local, highly specialist suppliers which designers make use of – from timber yards to metalworkers and machinists – still exists. ‘Brooklyn has great resources,’ says Will Kavesh, co-founder 4. Anamorphic Console by Asher Israelow 10 1. Jumbo 36 Bubble Chandelier by Pelle 2. Cyclone Lounger by Uhuru Design 3. Catenary Backless Stool by Token with Emrys Berkower of furniture and lighting company Token. ‘We produce most of our work ourselves but use some external manufacturers.’ In fact, Token is typical of many Brooklyn design outfits in that it’s relatively self-sufficient. According to Kavesh, one reason for this is economic: ‘Brooklyn’s factories can be expensive, which encourages designers to produce their own work.’ Another reason he cites is America’s ‘long designer-maker tradition’. ‘We have a strong DIY culture – Americans are equally interested in making and designing pieces.’ By contrast, for now, Brooklyn’s rents are relatively inexpensive. ‘Many designers can’t afford Manhattan’s rents so they’ve colonised outlying areas like Brooklyn and its disused warehouse spaces in such neighbourhoods as Red Hook, Bushwick and Sunset Park,’ says Oliver Pelle. While many designers prefer to live in Brooklyn than Manhattan, they acknowledge that they’re dependent on the latter, one of the world’s biggest furniture markets. Many of their clients are based in Manhattan, too, although this is changing, according to Asher Israelow, whose eponymous company’s custommade furniture often combines traditional woodworking with brass inlays in complex geometric patterns. ‘My customers used to be mostly Manhattan-based but many now live in Brooklyn.’ For Mark de la Vega, founder of luxe homeware brand DLV, Brooklyn’s proximity to Manhattan is a boon: ‘Our customers are there. It only takes me 10 minutes to drive through the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel to meet them.’ Then there are Manhattan’s fairs, including the Architectural Digest Home Design Show, the Armory Show, Collective, and, of course, ICFF – New York Design Week’s largest exhibition. (All the designers mentioned in this article are showing either at the fairgrounds or in one of the city’s hotspots. What’s more, they also appear in Architonic’s brand-new app, being launched just in time for May – Architonic Best Brooklyn NY Brands app.) ‘When it comes to shows, Manhattan has the edge,’ opines designer Brit Kleinman of the firm AVO, who hand-paints cowhide rugs and cushions with bold geometric prints inspired by traditional patterns found in Guatemala and New Mexico. But Brooklyn, too, has its fairs, notably Brooklyn Designs, founded in 2003 and located in northern neighbourhood Greenpoint. ‘We launched our company there last May,’ say Aaron and Heather Shoon, the husband-and-wife team behind Pletz, which makes lathe-turned lamps out of FSC-certified cherry, maple or walnut, the bestknown being the Delhi light with a turquoise-dyed neck that, the duo say, ‘offers a fresh take on mid-century design’. They describe their designs as being of ‘heirloom quality’, a popular Brooklyn term implying durability and by extension sustainability. 5. Metropolis Table by DLV 6. Umber and Black Bold by AVO 7. Sherman by Pletz Indeed, sustainability is a major concern for its designers, according to David Gaynor, who initially worked for Uhuru, then set up his eponymous furniture-making firm devoted ‘to a contemporary exploration of modernism’ (the movement many Brooklyn designers are inspired by): ‘There’s been a great push here for green furniture, upcycling and furniture with integrity. One aspect of this is makers taking pride in their pieces’ construction. Otherwise furniture falls apart and ends up as landfill.’ 8. DGD Lounge Chair by David Gaynor Design There are some drawbacks to being in Brooklyn though. ‘Many of my customers won’t leave Manhattan to come to my Brooklyn showroom,’ says Angel Naula, whose long- established company Naula creates bespoke furniture for a raft of celebrities, from actor Hugh Jackman to singer Norah Jones. According to Greenpoint-based designer Farrah Sit, whose stripped-down homeware often incorporates lines that create illusions of volume – take her Graphite planter-cum-light – another downside is the area’s creeping gentrification: ‘I’d prefer to stay in Brooklyn at all costs as it’s accessible to everything needed. But it’s uncertain how long we can stay here as land is increasingly being bought by developers for residential use.’ Designers’ survival here is threatened, too, by escalating property prices, notes Stefanie Brechbuehler, co-founder of Workstead, which designs interiors, furniture and lighting. ‘People are being priced out of parts of Brooklyn – the media has reported on it being one of the least affordable areas in the US.’ 9. 4x4 Ottoman by Naula It was not always thus, remembers furniture and lighting designer David Weeks, who began working for jeweller Ted Muehling in the 90s: ‘Back then, New York had a fledgling design scene. It was very craftsy, dominated by hand-made wooden furniture,’ recalls Weeks, whose work is manufactured in Brooklyn and sold at his showroom in Tribeca, Manhattan. ‘Later, a new generation of designers moved to Brooklyn during the 10. Porcelain Cluster Lights by Farrah Sit 11 recession when Manhattan wasn’t affordable and the Bronx was too far.’ ‘Some credit for the scene has to go to the 2008 economic slump,’ believes Ian Collings of Fort Standard, whose furniture and products are minimalist while ‘referencing craft traditions’. ‘People were being laid off or weren’t being hired, so they had to start their own companies, be self-sufficient, learn to get products to market quickly. Now, with the economy recovering, and some good experience under our belts our growth can finally be more focused.’ 11. Shaded Pendant by Workstead 12. Range Chair by Fort Standard 1. Pelle Today, slogans such as ‘Made in Brooklyn’ and ‘Brooklyn Brands’ are used to summarise the area’s designers and their aesthetic. Some, however, are sceptical about them. ‘They generally create a caricature of reclaimed, rough-hewn, handmade furniture. Yet people are doing a variety of things in Brooklyn, often creating very sophisticated work,’ says Mat Driscoll, founder of furniture firm Bellboy. ‘At trade fairs, I hear people say Brooklyn must be a fairyland for designers,’ says another designer. ‘You graduate, set up your business there and you’re up and running. But it’s not easy. It’s an interesting incubator of ideas but not the utopia some imagine.’ That said, many designers, such as Jason Miller, whose company Roll & Hill produces polished lighting in brass, bronze, leather, rope and mouth-blown glass, are ‘proud’ of being Brooklynbased: ‘It’s a great place. There’s a confluence of cultural strands here. Most people I bump into are part of the creative world, be it the relatively commercial field of advertising or food or design.’ 8. ICFF, booth 1144 2. Uhuru ICFF, booth 1448 Uhuru Showroom 74 Franklin Street New York, NY 10013 Opening hours: May 16th–19th, 10am–6pm Shuttles going between Javits Centre & showroom 3. Token WantedDesign Manhattan Terminal Stores, 269 11th Avenue New York, NY 10001 Opening hours: May 5th-18th, page 15 4. Asher Israelow Brooklyn Navy Yard, Building 3, 11th floor Brooklyn, NY 11205 Studio visits by appointment: +1 914.413.9925 5. DLV WantedDesign Manhattan Terminal Stores, 269 11th Avenue New York, NY 10001 Opening hours: May 15th–19th, page 15 SELECT Contemporary Art Fair Center 548 548 W. 22nd Street New York, NY 10011 Opening hours: May 15th, 2pm–10pm May 16th, 12pm–10pm May 17th, 12pm–6pm 6. AVO Sightunseen Offsite @ Hudson Mercantile building 500 West 36th Street New York, NY 10018 Opening hours: May 15th, 12pm–7pm May 16th–19th, 11am–7pm 7. Pletz @ David Gaynor ICFF, booth 1047 12 David Gaynor ICFF, booth 1047 9. Naula ICFF, booth 2218 10. Farrah Sit Colony, the designer‘s co-op 324 Canal Street, 2nd Floor New York, NY 10013 Opening hours: May 4th–29th, 12pm–6pm Cocktail party: May 14th, 6pm–10pm 13. Sarus Chandelier by David Weeks Studio 11. Workstead ICFF, booth 1962 12. Fort Standard 175 Van Dyke street, unit 325B Brooklyn, NY 11231 Studio visits by appointment: +1 718.576.2204 13. David Weeks Studio 38 Walker Street New York, NY 10013 Cocktail party: May 14th, 6pm–9pm 14. Academy Chair by Bellboy 14. Bellboy WantedDesign Manhattan Terminal Stores, 269 11th Avenue New York, NY 10001 Opening hours: Fri–Mon, page 15 WantedDesign Brooklyn 274 36th Street, Sunset Park Brooklyn, NY 11232 Opening hours: May 9th–19th, page 15 15. Roll & Hill The Future Perfect 55 Great Jones Street New York, NY 10012 Opening hours: Mon–Fri 10am–7am, Sat–Sun 11am–7pm Cocktail: 16th, Wonder Room Opening 7pm–9pm Cocktail: 7th, Roll & Hill 2015 Collection 6.30pm–9pm Coffee with Jason Miller: 18th, 9.30am–12pm 15. Fiddlehead pendant by Roll & Hill OFFERS & SERVICES FOR FOR MEMBERSHIP FOR MANUFACTURERS MEMBERSHIP FOR RETAILERS & AGENTS Every working day 46,000 professional visitors carry out product research at Architonic. Take the opportunity to present your products where customers are looking for them: You will get daily views, clicks and contacts. On top you can now book your membership on designboom.com to duplicate your presence. www.architonic.com/apply Every working day more than 150,000 product data sheets are accessed at architonic.com. 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FOR FOR MEMBERSHIP FOR ARCHITECTS MEMBERSHIP FOR DESIGNERS We publicise your best projects and your profile where the right people will see them. Our jury makes sure that the environment is a top-quality one. More than 30 selected media partners make regular use of our information pool. www.architonic.com /apply Here you can present your talent to the top manufacturers and the trade press with background information about yourself and your work, “making of” stories and your latest prototypes. And everything is linked to your products in our database. www.architonic.com /apply PRODUCT RESEARCH MARKET ANALYSIS Architonic offers you a comprehensive reference database with 200,000 professionally classified furnishing and building products and materials. You can carry out research without limits and free of charge, with direct access to CAD files, PDF catalogues, prices and dealer lists. www.architonic.com Before you launch a new design on the market it’s worth making an analysis of existing products. We can offer you a visually optimised overview of the best there is, always online and free of charge on www.architonic.com. MANUFACTURERS ARCHITECTS & PLANNERS RETAILERS & AGENTS DESIGNERS If you are interested in our services, please don’t hesitate to contact us at architonic.com /apply, by email to info@architonic.com or directly by phone on 0041 44 297 20 20. ARCHITONIC TREND ANALYSIS NORTH AMERICAN DESIGN BRANDS 2014-2015 Architonic is the world’s leading research tool for the specification of premium architectural and design products. Our curated database currently provides information about more than 200,000 products from 1,300 brands and 6,200 designers. 16 million architects, interior designers and design enthusiasts annually choose Architonic as their guide to the very best. This gives us an insight into developments in the architecture and design markets, which we would like to share with our community. With ICFF 2015 coming up, we have evaluated the top ten most popular North American design brands on architonic.com. This presentation is based on traffic information collected on architonic.com. All statistics and rankings shown on this spread are based on the number of relevant search queries entered in the text search field on architonic.com. All information was collected in the period October 1st 2014–March 31st 2015. MOST POPULAR NORTH AMERICAN DESIGN BRANDS ON ARCHITONIC.COM by text search (October 2014–March 2015) RANK BRAND COUNTRY FOUNDED 1 Knoll International USA 1938 2 Haworth USA 1901 3 Emeco USA 1944 4 Bocci Canada 2005 5 Kevin Reilly USA 2001 6 Tai Ping USA 1956 7 Molo Canada 2003 8 Bassam Fellows USA 2003 9 Skram USA 2001 David Weeks USA 1996 10 TRADEMARK WANTEDDESIGN MANHATTAN & BROOKLYN CONVERSA TION 43 LOUNGE CONVERSATION ROOM AMERI CA N DESIGN HONORS 1a 19 2 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 36 37 38 39 40 52 53 RESTAURANT 57 59 35 WELCOME POP-UP STORE 58 51 50 3 28 1 18 17 4 5 29 TEA 6 ROOM 7 GALLERY 6 LAUNCH PA D 30 31 33 34 60 CAFE 41 42 43 45 46 47 48 49 54 55 56 16 15 14 13 32 12 11 10 44 GALLERY 14 9 8 55 A-form 27 Driade 38 Gufram 60 Moroso 39 Alcantara 34 Design Within Reach 23 Horm.IT 60 Seletti 22 Token 39 Bellboy 46 Felturn 52 Jake Dyson 47 David Turbridge 60 Foscarini 50 Kontextur 31 Urbancase 27 DLV 31 Graypants 48 Menu 1a USM Exhibitors from WantedDesign Brooklyn (without plan): Areaware Bellboy Flavor Paper USM WantedDesign Manhattan Terminal Stores, 269 11th Avenue New York, NY 10001 Fri: Press Preview & VIP Party - invitation only Sat–Sun: 10am–7pm (open to trade and public) Mon: 10am–7pm (trade only) Shuttle Service: Complimentary shuttle service between WantedDesign Manhattan and WantedDesign Brooklyn will be offered Friday/Saturday/Sunday/Monday May 15th–18th; departs every hour from each location ADVERTISEMENT WantedDesign Brooklyn 274 36th Street, Sunset Park Brooklyn, NY 11232 Open to the public and trade (no entrance fee) Thu–Tue: 11am–6pm 15 Axor WaterDream designed by Front on display at MAD from April 28 – September 27, 2015 Industrial charm moves into the shower. Exposed pipes and valves, previously found in factories, find a place again — this time with exceptional elegance. Explore the Axor WaterDream by all-female design group Front at the MAD exhibition Pathmakers: Women in Art, Craft and Design, Midcentury and Today. MAD museum is located at 2 Columbus Circle, NYC, 10019 To learn more about Axor, stop by our showroom: AXORNYC 29 NINTH AVENUE, NYC 10014 212.463.5790 AXORNYC@HANSGROHE.COM ARCHITONIC STATEMENTS TODD HEISER DESIGN DIRECTOR, GENSLER “Architonic is an exhaustive resource for designers. It is a ‘one-stop Wikipedia’ of design resources. I love the printed guides, and I use the site as a tool almost daily.” ANDREAS DORNBRACHT MANAGING DIRECTOR, DORNBRACHT “Architonic plays a major role in qualifying and selecting what the market offers to the architect. And I especially think that a limited and curated offer of brands and products is key to the architect. The architect is becoming more and more important to us, and right now, with the help of Architonic, we are developing a communication strategy towards the architectural community.” ANU LEINONEN ARCHITECT, OMA REM KOOLHAAS “Staying informed about the latest developments in building materials is very time-consuming. I really appreciate the support Architonic offers as a professional website in this field. Architects screening the current developments for us – this is what we have been waiting for!” FREDERIK BILLIAU GENERAL SALES DIRECTOR, MDF ITALIA “What we especially like about Architonic is the fact that dealers are also part of the concept. So even people who don’t know Architonic will be directed by the Virtual Showroom on our dealers’ websites to the Architonic database, which will help them to find the products they are searching for.!” DESIGNJUNCTION EDIT B3 B17 B16 Warli Melin Tregwynt A8 B1 Decode B15 B12 B11 Tokyobike A1-A MAIN ENTRANCE B17 Colé B1 Imamura B3 Modus B12 Very Good & Proper B15 Decode B11 Massproductions B16 Muuto B17 Warli B17 H Furniture A8 Melin Tregwynt A1-A Tokyobike Designjunction Edit ArtBeam 540 W 21st Street New York, NY 10011 Fri: Sat: Sun: Mon: 11am–9pm 11am–7pm 11am–6pm 11am–4pm World‘s Best Design Products Now available for free! ADVERTISEMENT 19 NEW YORK CITY EVENTS EVENTS & SHOWROOMS OF ARCHITONIC MEMBERS 1 1 B&B Italia A&D Building 150 East 58th Street (btw. Lexington & 3rd Ave.) 4 Mon–Fri 4 1 3 5 9am–5pm 9 10 11 1 12 13 14 SieMatic A&D Building 150 East 58th Street, 8th Floor (btw. Lexington & 3rd Ave.) Mon–Fri 15 9am-5pm Snaidero A&D Building 150 East 58th Street, 8th Floor (btw. Lexington & 3rd Ave.) Mon–Fri 9am–5pm 16 1 17 18 2 19 20 22 25 26 2 24 23 27 28 29 30 2 32 3 Day Day Event Time 11am–7pm 12pm–6pm 10am–7pm 12pm–6pm Kvadrat D&D Building 979 Third Ave., Suite 1701 Mon–Fri Sat Sun Google Maps 9am-5pm DWR NYC – 57th and 3rd 957 Third Ave. (at E. 57th Street) Mon–Sat Sun 31 7 8 10am–6pm noon–6pm 1pm–6pm Promemoria The Fine Arts Building 232 East 59th Street Mon–Fri 9am-5pm 9am–6pm 10am–5pm Jan Kath 555 West 25th Street 2nd Floor Mon-Fri 9 12pm–7pm 11am–7pm Poggenpohl 270 Park Ave. South (at 21st St.) Mon–Fri Sat Dedon D&D Building 979 Third Ave., Suite 1115 (Third between 58th & 59th St.) Mon–Fri Sat 21 12pm 12pm Sight Unseen Offsite AVO | Assembly Design | Bower | Brian Thoreen | Calico Wallpaper | Christopher Specce | Egg Collective | Eric Trine | Fort Makers | Ladies & Gentlemen Studio | Lambert et Fils | Mercury Bureau | Michael Felix | Whyte | 100xbtr Hudson Mercantile building 500 West 36th Street Fri Sat–Mon Valli&Valli A&D Building 150 East 58th Street, 6th Floor (btw. Lexington & 3rd Ave.) Mon–Fri Laufen ICFF - Javits Convention Center 11th Avenue at 38th Street or 655 W 34th St Sun 17th 6 1 9am–6pm 12pm–6pm 9am–5pm 7 8 5 10am–6pm Cassina 155 East 56th (btw. Lexington & 3rd Ave.) Mon–Fri Sat–Sun Poliform A&D Building 150 East 58th Street, 6th Floor (btw. Lexington & 3rd Ave.) Mon–Fri 6 Mon–Fri Poggenpohl A&D Building 150 East 58th Street, 1st Floor (btw. Lexington & 3rd Ave.) Mon–Fri 1 2 4 9am–5pm Flexform 155 East 56th Street 10am–6pm Giorgetti 261 Madison Ave., Unit 1030 10 Ddc domus design collection ddc 2015 collection 181 Madison Ave Mon–Fri Sat 18th 9.30am–6pm 11am–6pm 6pm-9pm Invitation only! 10 Zanotta 181 Madison Ave @ 34th Street Mon–Fri Sat 9.30am–6pm 11am–6pm 11 Dune 200 Lexington Ave. Ground Floor Mon–Fri Sat 9am–6pm 10am–6pm This list was printed on April 24th, 2015. We apologise sincerely if we have omitted or misplaced any top-quality manufacturers. Best Brooklyn NY Brands iOS Android Now available for free! free! 20 ADVERTISEMENT NEW YORK CITY EVENTS EVENTS & SHOWROOMS OF ARCHITONIC MEMBERS 11 Ddc domus design collection ddc 2015 collection 136 Madison Ave Mon–Fri Sat 15th 9.30am–6pm 11am–6pm 6pm-9pm Invitation only! 11 M2L 135 Madison Avenue Mon–Fri 9am–5pm by appointment 13 DuPont Corian 49 West 23rd Street, 3rd Floor Mon–Fri 9am–5pm 14 Arclinea 21 East, 26th Street Mon–Fri 10am–6pm 15 Suite NY 419 Park Avenue South, 17th Floor Mon–Fri Sat–Sun 9am–6pm 11am–5pm 16 Axor 29 9th Ave., 2nd Floor (at W 13th St.) Mon–Fri 9am–6pm Sat 10am–6pm 16 Vitra 29 9th Ave. Mon–Fri 11am-7pm 17 Allermuir 125 Fifth Avenue 17 DWR NYC – Flatiron 903 Broadway (at 20th Street) Mon–Sat Sun 10am–7pm 12pm–6pm 18 Tai Ping 860 Broadway, 4th Floor Mon–Fri 9am–5pm 19 Bulthaup 158 Wooster Street (at West Houston St.) 10am–6pm 11pm–5pm Mon–Sat Sun Mon–Fri Sat–Sun 11am–7pm 12pm–6pm 23 Gandia Blasco 52 Greene Street (btw. Broome & Grand St.) 10am–6pm 11pm–5pm 19 Poltrona Frau 145 Wooster Street (btw. Prince&Houston St.) Sat Sun–Tue 23 Kartell 39 Greene Street (btw. Grand & Broom St.) 10am–9pm 10am–7pm Mon-Sat Sun 20 B&B Italia 138 Greene Street (btw. Prince & Houston St.) Mon–Sat Mon–Fri Sat Sun 10am–7pm 12pm–6pm Tue, Wed Fri–Sun Thu 11am–7pm 12am–6pm 21 Roll& Hill @ The future perfect 55 Great Jones Street Mon–Fri Sat–Sun 16th 17th 10am–7am 11am–7pm 7pm–9pm 6.30pm–9pm ADVERTISEMENT Mon–Fri Sat 10am–6pm 12pm–5pm 11am–7pm 12am–7pm 26 Foscarini 17 Greene Street (btw. Canal & Grand St.) 10am–6pm noon–6pm 1pm–6pm 26 Fritz Hansen 22 Wooster Street (between Grand St and Canal) Mon–Fri Sat Sun 10am–6pm 11am–6pm 23 Bisazza 43 Greene Street (btw. Grand & Broome St.) Mon–Sat 25 Espasso 38 N. Moore Street Mon-Fri Sat 23 Artemide 46 Greene Street (btw. Grand & Broome St.) Mon–Fri Sat 11am–6pm 11am–6pm 11am–9pm 26 Boffi 31 Greene Street (btw. Canal & Grand St.) 22 Molteni&C 60 Greene Street (btw Broome & Spring St.) Mon–Fri Sat Sun 10am–6pm 11am–7pm 12pm–6pm 24 Dornbracht New Museum Triennial 235 Bowery 20 Moroso 146 Greene Street Mon–Sat Sun 11am–7pm noon–6pm 23 Luceplan 49 Greene Street (btw. Broome & Grand St.) 11am–7pm 20 DWR NYC – SoHo 110 Greene St. (between Prince and Spring) Mon–Sat Sun 11am–7pm 12pm–5pm 23 Fontana Arte 45 Greene Street (btw. Grand & Broome St.) 19 Cassina 151 Wooster Street 11am–7pm noon–6pm 2pm–6pm 26 Ingo Maurer 89 Grand Street (at Greene St.) 10am–6pm Mon-Sat Sun JUST ADD YOU. Mon–Fri Sat Mon–Fri Sat 23 Flou 42 Greene Street (btw. Broome & Grand St.) 10am–6pm 12 Duravit 105 Madison Ave. (btw. 29th & 30th St.) Mon–Fri 19 Cappellini 158 Wooster Street (at West Houston St.) 26 USM 28–30 Greene Street Mon–Fri Sat 10am–6pm 12pm–6pm 26 Chen-Chen @ Colony, the designer’s co-op 324 Canal Street, 2nd Floor Mon-Fri Sat 11am–7pm 12pm–6pm 26 Colony 324 Canal Street - 2nd Floor Mon-Fri Sat 11am–7pm 12pm–6pm 26 Farrah Sit Reclaim NYC x Colony @ Colony, the designer’s co-op 324 Canal Street, 2nd Floor 4th–29th 14th 12pm–6pm 6pm–10pm 27 BDDW 5 Crosby Street Mon–Fri 10am–6pm 28 Artek 199 Lafayette Street, Suite 5D (btw. Spring & Grand St.) Mon–Fri 9.30am–5.30pm 29 Gabriel Scott 372 Broome Street (corner Mott Street) Mon–Fri Sat–Sun 14th 10am–6pm 12pm–6pm 6pm–9pm 30 David Weeks Studio 38 Walker Street 14th 6pm–9pm 30 Uhuru Design Uhuru Showroom 74 Franklin Street Sat–Tue 10am–6pm 31 Capdell 275 Broome Street 32 Architonic Speakeasy 9 Doyers Street 17th 9pm–2am Invitation only! 11am–7pm noon–6pm COME AND VISIT US AT BOOTH: 1724 www.duravit.me 21 DOTSANDPLANES LAUNCHES A NEW FORMAT: THE INDEPENDENTLY CURATED INSPIRATION TOUR Today, architects and interior designers looking for inspiration can visit shows, consult media and take part in seminars. dotsandplanes’ European Inspiration Tour wants to go further with a 5-day long design immersion, with independently picked visits, and with the perfect atmosphere to build lasting business connections. From 15th to 19th June, dotsandplanes organises its first European Inspiration Tour for a group of 12 selected, US-based interior designers and architects. The trip focuses on the Scandinavian and German speaking axis of European design, with stops in Denmark and Switzerland - both competing for the title of best place to live in the world - and does not miss the momentum of Design Miami/Basel and Art Basel, which runs that same week. Content is key. dotsandplanes founders and tour guides Joost Vanhecke and An Michiels have created a multifaceted programme with various partners, organisations and brands that offer relevant food for thought. Think along the lines of a live production showcase of Arne Jacobsen’s Bellevue lamp at &Tradition’s dockside headquarters in Copenhagen or get insights into the possibilities of timbersurface treatments through Dinesen’s Design Studies. A visit to Renzo Piano’s Paul Klee Centre in Bern will be followed by an exclusive dinner in the original Fritz Haller Pavilion of modularfurniture brand USM, and the latest buildings and installations at the Vitra Campus can be discovered during the Vitra Summer Party. “To set a new style in building professional relationships, we organise a one-of-akind experience for American specifiers, fully devoted to the exploration of the status of the European design scene. We aim to bring about relevant connections between design professionals at the right scale, the right moment and with the right intensity.” Ammann Gallery at Design Miami/Basel Arne Jacobsen’s Bellevue lamp dotsandplanes considers online applications for the European Inspiration Tour. All information including the application procedure, day-to-day travel schedule, pricing and a few words on the organisers and the partners can be found at www.dotsandplanes.com. Included in the tour package are complementary offers by dotsandplanes’ partners Architonic, German Design Council and WantedDesign. A second tour from London to the Benelux is being developed for Autumn 2015. About dotsandplanes dotsandplanes connects design professionals, brands and media through guided trips across continents. Artistic director Joost Vanhecke and architect and curator An Michiels founded dotsandplanes together with digital specialist Brik De Maeyer in 2014. They met whilst working for the Biennale Interieur, known since 1968 as the most ‘designed’ biennale on the European calendar. For more information: Contact An Michiels: an@dotsandplanes.com dotsandplanes’ European Inspiration Tour to Denmark and Switzerland 22 The original USM Haller system NEW MUSEUM TRIENNIAL 2015: ‘SURROUND AUDIENCE‘ DIS PRESENTS THE ISLAND (KEN) - CREATED IN COLLABORATION WITH DORNBRACHT AND CODESIGNED BY MIKE MEIRÉ On the occasion of the 2015 New Museum Triennial titled ‘Surround Audience‘, the New York based artist collective DIS presents The Island (KEN), an installation developed in collaboration with Dornbracht and codesigned by creative director and designer Mike Meiré. It‘s exhibited in the Lobby Gallery at the New Museum in New York until May 24th, 2015. It is Dornbracht‘s extraordinary involvement in cultural discourse, as well as its premium standard of aesthetics and quality, which motivated the New York based artist collective DIS to approach Dornbracht with the idea of a joint project designed especially for the renowned New Museum Triennial. In collaboration with creative director and designer Mike Meiré, who has accompanied the brand for over 20 years now and served as curator and contributor to the Dornbracht Culture Projects, they developed The Island (KEN). This hybrid product unites the (social) kitchen and the (private) bathroom, raising new questions regarding logic and application. The precision and high-end finishing of the work provides the new „product“ with a seriousness, which inevitably results in a confusion of the observers‘ viewing habits. However, The Island (KEN) is not only a prototype and a showroom, but also the scene of an ongoing performance created and organized by DIS: A philosopher making salad while discussing hyper objects, a lifestyle guru doing ASMR (Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response), a woman in khaki pants laying under the Horizontal Shower while the smell of butter emanates from the electric stove. Photo DIS: Sabine Reitmaier The Island (KEN) embodies a perfect symbiosis of design and art. Merging both disciplines reveals the aesthetic and atmospheric power of the Dornbracht products, such as Horizontal Shower and eUnit Kitchen placing them in an entirely different setting. The result is a new space that bursts the boundaries of conventional functional rooms and allows the viewer to see the (Dornbracht) world in a new way. Horizontal shower demonstrations will be performed regularly during weekends. Visit the New Museum Triennial, Public Hours New Museum: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday: 11 a.m.–6 p.m., Thursday : 11 a.m.–9 p.m. Performances demonstrating the shower functionality of DIS’s The Island (KEN) take place every Saturday through the end of the exhibition. ‘The Island (KEN)‘: Installation and live performance in New York on the occasion of the New Museum Triennial ‘Surround Audience‘. Created by DIS in collaboration with Dornbracht, and co-designed by Mike Meiré. Photos: Heji Shin, Copyright: Dornbracht Visit Dornbracht at ICFF, booth 1248 23 Shade Reimagined Discover the latest TUUCI shade styles at ICFF booth # 1306 ocean master MAX manta www.tuuci.com t. 305 634 5116 e. info@tuuci.com