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full example here (16.2 MB, pdf)
LABORATORY FOR VISIONARY FASHION “YOU HEAR ABOUT IT AT DINNER PARTIES AND FASHION EVENTS. IT’S BEEN THE SUBJECT OF COUNTLESS MAGAZINE STORIES AND NEWS REPORTS. SOMETHING SPECIAL IS GOING ON IN BRAZIL.” —Suleman Anaya. TABLE OF CONTENTS 006 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 008 ABOUT THE DESIGNER 020 BR FASHION TRAJECTORY 022 EXPERIMENTING BEAUTY 026 INSPIRATIONS INTRODUCTION 012 ABSTRACT 014 BRAZIL TALKING TO THE WORLD 016 BONITO POR NATUREZA ( BEAUTIFUL BY NATURE ) 034 CASE STUDIES 038 OWNERSHIP (CLIENTS) 040 WHO’S AROUND? (USERS) 056 PROGRAMMING 044 SÃO PAULO, BRAZIL 060 CONCEPTUAL THREAD 046 DASLU: THE FASHION EMPIRE 064 PROJECT C.D. RESEARCH 082 RE-SKINNING 088 LOBBY 104 LIBRARY 120 RUNWAY 136 NIGHTCLUB PROJECT 156 FINAL THOUGHTS 158 SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY INTRO DUCTION ABSTRACT More than shaping faces and life styles, Bra- and create their art under influence of the tech- zilian cultural backgrounds can be seen and nology and values acquired in this cultural felt in what is produced nowadays in the coun- environment. A unique mix of entertainment, try. The cultural footprint in contemporary Bra- manufacturing, retail, educational and cultural zilian design is strong and dynamic, qualities that are apparent from observation. contours, forms, cuts, textures, shapes and col- design cannot be completely generalized to ors are explored side by side in each interior the whole country to the point of establishing space. ion and architecture. Indeed, this design is the product of certain strategic and aesthetic decisions that are influenced by the latest technologies, the materials and their potential uses, and the way Brazilians engage with these aspects. LAVIF INTRODUCTION ing design. Where fashion meets architecture, The findings of this research and its final a definitive Brazilian style and identity in fash- 12 programs are articulated within the new build- From its beginning until the present, the objective of the design development emphasises the creation of a new culture of fashion, incorporating technology, and other disciplines such as architecture and biology. Given the cultural background, this is what Boosting and strengthening the Brazilian gives Brazilian design a particularly unique fashion; promoting the cultural and economic quality. growth; attracting tourists; disseminating the Located in the city of São Paulo, Brazil, the city in the world press; generating jobs; and Laboratory for Visionary Fashion (LAVIF) is moving the commerce, culture, gastronomy, the new house for the (inter)national fashion hotels. This is why LAVIF is important to the designers, whose interests are to experiment city of São Paulo and its country. INTRODUCTION LAVIF 13 Image and text from What about Brazilian Brands? Perhaps the first Brazilian brand to be truly interna- Santos wrote in his book Happy 1958, The Year That tionalized—Bossa Nova—was launched in the same Was Not Supposed to End (Feliz 1958, o ano que não year by two brilliant young men, Tom Jobim and Joao devia terminar), “pride” became a fashionable word. Gilberto. Bossa Nova soon evolved beyond a musical trend to become a whole attitude of life. The new and more modern Brazil was knocking on the door: even President Juscelino Kubitschek was dubbed as “bossa nova.”In retrospect, the music, in some ways, was an early indicator of the optimism that America’s boom years would spread across the world only a few years later. Juscelino Kubitschek (aka JK) was not blind to this flood of opportunity that the U.S.’s prosperity brought BRAZIL TALKING TO THE WORLD It is hard to say when exactly Brazil first looked at the rest of the world and decided it had to carve out its own brand and personality, but most would say that the seeds were likely planted in 1958, when it won its first World Cup in Sweden. At that moment, Brazil announced to the world its swing, its classy lifestyle, and its soccer stars Garrincha and Pelé. 14 LAVIF INTRODUCTION with it. Noting the enormous potential that lay in furthering Brazil’s international growth, he opened up And now, after fifty years, the bossa nova period in Brazil has come into fruition, our brand (and bossa nova itself ) is once again a rising global star. Brazil is talking to the world, telling people that it is fun loving and highly adaptable, with a flair for improvisation—but always backed by numbers, strategy and lots of hard work. In the fashion and beauty industries, brands have evolved all of the juicy clichés, transforming them into an innovative and contemporary professionalism. While we can’t boast the world’s unani- the economy to foreign investors and encouraged mous admiration of French haute couture or its new industries to relocate to Brazil. For the first time assessment of Italy’s impeccable taste, we have ever, automobiles were manufactured entirely in been able to create a language that can travel the Brazil; VW Beetles rolled off the lines in 1958, in the world and incite desire in a short period of time. ABC region of São Paulo. Amid the euphoria of these We are on the world’s agenda for fashion events, boom years, President Kubitschek campaigned on his we are exporting models, and now we are exporting famous catchphrase “Fifty years in five.” He also asked brands too. (Not many of them yet, it is true.) Brazil- Oscar Niemeyer, a member of the cultural avant- ian’s have a lively eye for detecting demands and re- garde, to design the new vision of the capital of Bra- sponding to them. Responses are alert and refined. sília in a location that had nothing to do with beach- Now strategy must also be refined. The behavior of es, or with any tropical clichés involving bananas. consumers over technology has to be understood— Brazil’s World Cup win enabled Brazilians to drop and the hearts and minds of new consumers, win over their mutt complex. As journalist Joaquim Ferreira dos to ultimately sell more. INTRODUCTION LAVIF 15 The identity of Brazilian fashion reflects our multiplicity and versatility, attributes of a diverse and young country. BONITO POR NATUREZA Since 1500, Brazil has been a place for the BEAUTIFUL BY NATURE blending of different cultures. Starting with Brazilian natives, Portuguese and Africans, the mixture increased with a massive number of immigrants from 1887 until the Second World War, who equally contributed to the formation of one of the most ethnically diverse countries in the world. Brazilian anthropologist Roberto Damatta affirms that Brazilians are considered the perfect synthesis of all egory for Brazil, as a society which celebrates in ating new and alternative products, and we have of the races. This reveals the country’s capacity to betweenness, is what shapes the Brazilian charac- a unique approach to our country’s natural setting reconsider oppositional categories and reconfigure ter and culture. and resources. We love analyzing things and rein- them in a positive light. “Brazil is not a dual country which operates only with the logic of the in or out, right or wrong, man or woman, married or separated, God or devil, black or white. On the contrary, in the case of our society, the difficulty seems exactly to apply the dualism of exclusion character; an opposition which determines an inclusion of a term and the automatic exclusion of other, as usual in the American and South African prejudice and we, Brazilians, consider as brutal.”, Damata states. According to Lilia Schwarcz, Brazilians use over 130 shades to identify their skin color, such as ‘coffee and milk’ and ‘suntanned’. She affirms ‘it is not possible to believe in a unique definition. Brazil is so many things!’. This impossible definitional cat16 LAVIF INTRODUCTION Brazil’s land is lovely and bountiful. It is a landscape of endless generosity and the geography is as warm and welcoming as the Brazilians, always finding a way to crack a smile. There are no earthquakes, no tsunamis, and aside from the occasional drought or torrential downpour, nature is usually in a good mood. Energy flows as if by magic: plenty of sunlight and endless supplies of water; the Amazon pumping out oxygen to the world; gems in Minas Gerais. There’s gold deposits, sugarcane, oil, food and drink. venting them, making new products and specializing in any number of other “transformations” to show people that we are good, indeed very good, at taking the commonplace and improving it. That is how we make our presence felt in Brazil and around the world too. Beauty comes with the territory, and appreciating beauty is our calling in life. This is evident in everything from our inarguable expertise in bikinis, to our way of flaunting our body, and our individual interpretations of the hang of garments (taking into Such copious gifts of nature cannot but favor account the high level of skin exposure required this nation. Brazil has always been recognized as due to the heat). Beauty lives alongside the colors one of the world’s greatest source of food supplies in Brazil’s sunlight and beaches, where aesthetic and today this image is even stronger. We are cre- democracy reigns supreme. INTRODUCTION LAVIF 17 SEARCH RE SPF W + BRAZILIAN TRAJECTORY IN FASHION As time passed, the mass of immigrants began and television began to have an extensive influ- to settle down and identify a certain aesthetic com- ence on fashion, in particular Brazilian soap opera. monality. This had its public manifestation in 1922 Still habitually travelling to Europe and America, at the first ‘Semana de Arte Moderna’ (Modern Art fashion professionals began to adapt foreign fash- Week) which saw itself as a rupture with European ion to their own reality and realized that copying or culture. However, its influence on fashion only hap- just adapting foreign fashion was no longer good pened around 20 years later when international for their business as they were producing enough cinema productions explored the rhythm and swing to export. In response to this high demand the first of Brazilian music and dance without any commit- fashion school was established in Brazil in 1987, at ment to Brazilian reality. Since then, forests, fruits, Faculdade Santa Marcelina. samba, beautiful women, and carnival have become the icons of Brazil. LAVIF RESEARCH sil became São Paulo Fashion Week, the SPFW, In the 1950’s the United States had a great influ- which is now the fifth most important fashion event ence in Brazil as a model of economic and cultural in the world, making São Paulo known as the fash- development. The American way of dressing pre- ion capital city of Latin America. In the 2000’s, the sented in movies and musicals began to be incor- challenges for Brazilian fashion identity were to at- porated on a daily basis. This acceptance of foreign tend international market needs in relation to Bra- fashion trends began to be questioned and Brazil- zilian culture and to preserve national identity with- ian designers created their first collections inspired out making it look folklore or regional. by popular Brazilian products, such as the coffee. 20 Created in 1996, the Morumbi Fashion Bra- I admit that Brazil’s complex colonial past and In the early 70’s the Brazilian fashion design- rich history of immigration make the country rich er Zuzu Angel became popular. Angel’s inspiring pickings for designers. However, this “vast array of themes reflected the oppression of the military cultures” provides the Brazilian fashion a wealth censorship imposed on the country during the 60’s, of graphic icons, clothes, colors and identities as a more engaged cultural expression than only Bra- inspirations. In this scenery, the question is what zilian natural resources. The 1980’s Rio de Janeiro Brazilian fashion imbues to mean it is Brazilian. RESEARCH LAVIF 21 EX FAS HIO NISW YOU FOU ’REOFFE HAT YEA R TIMES RED R. S WH TYL A AT Y E IS O PIC U KO UT O THA T FA F SHIO N. PERIMENTING BEAUTY Beauty lies in the essence of art. For me, not every art is beautiful but every beautiful thing is art. I see beauty in things I feel interested in, and I find it interesting by understanding its messages, meanings, and origins. Then, my imagination takes care of the beauty. However, it doesn’t mean I don’t like the ugly. Those art pieces that are not meant to be beautiful don’t mean that there isn’t something about it that does not captivate my imagination. In architecture, I believe there is a collision between the ugliness in art and the utilitarian world. I disagree with Louis Sullivan’s principle “form follows function” from the 20th century, because if you consider only the function of things you built, it can soon be useless. However, if you built something beautiful, it can serve multiples. In my design process, which includes my perception of architecture and fashion, beauty is a vital resource. Through the search for beauty, I’ll design LAVIF’s world as the first Brazilian visionary fashion home. Despite the content and interior spaces, the technology used in the facade will expand passers’ and users’ joys. Experimenting beauty is essential to create a balance in human life, giving us meanings, connecting us with the world we live in, and taking us out of routines. RESEARCH LAVIF 23 Opposite page - one edge 1. Flash and photo 2. Two edges 3. Two corners 4. Four corners 1 2 3 The intention of this experiment is to create an of shapes was formed by playing with a flashlight. item that represents my thinking process of this Two-way mirrors, or one-way mirrors as they are particular design. It’s visually simple, but complex also called, are materials that transmit the light in its process and understanding. It can represent a space, a garment, a painting, nature, or anything the observer imagines. With that in mind, the idea is to create a structure made out of two-way mirrors and light. This research began in an raw project that was meant to present the concept of the structural grid as a formal principle and with that, simply create 24 LAVIF RESEARCH 4 from one side and reflect it from the other. They are intriguing, beguiling and thought-provoking for the optical, perceptive characteristics and the many connotations that derive from it. The space of the mirror is not a field of a virtual but of a dematerialized reality. The perception of depth in this space is retained, although in the a beautiful thing. It was easy manual work and a mirror image no longer exists. Apparently paradoxi- couple of old pieces of mirrors were used to cre- cally, the mirror time is objectified, and space is rel- ate a cube. In order to create rhythm, a repetition ativised, being simply turned into a plane surface. RESEARCH LAVIF 25 INSPIRATIONS `` “I start with the fabric, material and touch. Then I go to the form. Maybe forms require a certain material or a certain material requires real form for them.” —Yohji Yamamoto INSPIRATIONS HUSSEIN CHALAYAN Hussein Chalayan was born in Nicosia in 1970 and graduated from the Turkish Maarif College of his hometown. He moved with his family to England in 1978, obtaining British citizenship. He graduated at Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design in London 1993, his collection titled “The Tangent Flows”, contained clothes which he had buried in his back yard and dug up again. An instant sensation, the whole collection was purchased and displayed in luxury designer store Browns in London. In 1995, Chalayan beat 100 competitors to clinch a top London fashion design award. In the contest, organized by the company “Absolut”, Chalayan, aged 25, won financial backing of £28,000 to develop creations for the British capital’s Fashion Week in October of that same year. His clothes are minimal in look but maximal in thought; his fascination with architec28 LAVIF RESEARCH ture, spatial dynamics,urban identity and aerodynamics are expressed in garments based on concepts, architectural systems and theories of the body. Chalayan’s sense of the visual is ultimately true to his grasp of the practical and cultural needs resolved by clothing. He is one of the few fashion practitioners who can be recognized as a designer rather than a ‘stylist’. Many of the creative working in the fashion industry merely resurrect older modes of dress or reinvent the basic garments found within the traditional fashion canon. Chalayan moves forward with completely new forms, shapes and materials conceived to dene space, rejecting the construction principles and notions of contemporary architecture more than conventional fashion. RESEARCH LAVIF 29 INSPIRATIONS WORLD OF SCI-FI PRODUCTION Looking at the newly released production photos from Tron Legacy, it’s hard not to be struck by how much of the movie was shot on real sets. With the demands of 3-D and CG movie-making, plus the need for real-life spaces that look like they could be inside of the computer, it’s easy to see the influence of Kosinski’s architectural background. In a recent conference (You Tube video), Kosinski talked about starting a small film after school where he and his partner wanted to blend architecture, design and film. People thought he was crazy to think that an architect could be a film director—and that it might be a 30 LAVIF RESEARCH waste of a good architecture degree. Je Bridges praised Kosinski’s ability to plan dierent constructs and lm them three-dimensionally for this film. “It’s interesting dierent lm makers where they come from and what they bring to the lm and [Kosinski’s] an architect and so the film has a very, you know, heightened design feel to it. And he hired this wonderful production designer, Darren Gilford. And he is out of car design so it adds another thing. It’s not somebody, you know, who is an interior decorator.”, said Bridges. RESEARCH LAVIF 31 DESIGN BY VARIOUS ARTISTS CASE STUDY Laboratory = Experiments Stimulating environment ARCHITECTURAL PROJECTION MAPPING & DIGITAL INTERACTION Motion: Visual & Touch sensitive Informative & Proftable Building’s nightlife slack-jawed gawping factor it’s also a fond favorite Visual design highlights and innovative applica- for brand promotion. tions interact and operate like an ingenious integral “voucher system.” The spectacle offers an interac- The success of the interactive windows shop tive brand experience in any public space – with- and interior store’s walls also has a positive influ- out the help of street promoters, once it could be ence on brands and buildings. By lifting the bar- extended in smaller scale around the city. The act riers between shop and street there is a positive of suspending your disbelief to watch moving im- shift in brand image and an increase in customer ages, and the application of projecting these, has traffic and profit. For the consumer, there is a high its roots in cinema, but it also adds the collective entertainment value and visual fun factor. A good thrill of large gatherings, felt at public events like a example is the Diesel interactive window (image firework display or a free concert. Over the last few 4) fully embraces the zeitgeist of a target customer years it’s become a popular way to wow crowds at group for whom the virtual world is a life style, not celebratory events of all kinds and because of the a necessity. 1 1. The dynamic process of studyng how a trashed material as cardboard can become beautiful with few resources.Digital Design Workshop, by MAPT. 2. Strukt Design Studio created this digital wallpaper for an office space in Vienna using only a wall and digital projectors. 3. The picture shows a captivating moment of an architectural projection on Hamburg Kunsthalle Museum, in Germany. The project named 555 KUBIK, ‘How it would be if a house was dreaming‘ makes use of the architectural details of the Gallery of Contemporary Art to create fantastic illusions which simply boggles the mind.I bet you would take a second look at the video when you finish with the page! 4. Inside Diesel’s interactive window, which was tied to its “Destroyed” jeans campaign, shoppers could control the weather via a video game that linked to the window set-up. 2 32 LAVIF RESEARCH 3 4 RESEARCH LAVIF 33 DESIGN BY CASE STUDY ZAHA HADID Spectacle within a Spectacle Respect original architecture Color relationship Material JS BACH CHAMBER MUSIC HALL Function x Form A unique chamber music hall specially designed to house solo performances of Johann Sebastian Bach works – enhancing the multiplicity of his music by using a single, continuous ribbon of fabric which constantly changes, stretches, compresses and moves around itself to cocoon both performers and audience within an intimate fluid space. A translucent, fabric membrane stretched over a steel structure suspended from the ceiling divides and encloses the space, creating a stage, enclosure for the audience and passages into and out of the auditorium. It would be interesting to see how the bold monochrome design is affected by the multicolored clothing of the audience members. 34 LAVIF RESEARCH Location: Manchester Art Gallery, T1 Gallery, Manchester, UK Client: Manchester International Festival Program: Chamber Music Hall Site Area: 17m x 25m Architect: Zaha Hadid Architects Design Team: Melodie Leung and Gerhild Orthacker Acoustic Consultant: Sandy Brown Associates Tensile Engineer: Tony Hogg Design Ltd Fabricator: Base Structures RESEARCH LAVIF 35 DESIGN BY CASE STUDY JEAN NOUVEL Shopping experience Stimulating environment EXCELSIOR MILANO Respect original architecture Museum-like Retail use Update trend - media Flow & Movement The relation between the pre-existing structure and the new one occurs by reflection: the inner walls of the old movie theatre are coated with reflecting paints, while the exterior supports LED screens all along the outer edge. It’s a project on fashion, food and design. Jean Nouvel’s project is contemporary but in line with the existing Excelsior, designed to become a statement of style. 36 LAVIF RESEARCH Excelsior’s clients have a clear sense of style and well travelled. The shopping experience it offers aims to be cross-genre and always putting the focus on excellence. The technological flow that ideally links the ancient site to the new hub dedicated to high profile urban shopping, is achieved by an envelope of images that seems to run through all floors. It invites you to take a journey into the future of shopping. RESEARCH LAVIF 37 OWNERSHIP CLIENTS’ PROFILES Created 30 years ago, Iguatemi Empresa de Shopping Centers S.A. is the division of the Jereissati Group responsible for planning, building, structuring and managing shopping malls. Since 1979 Iguatemi manages Brazil’s first shopping center, the Iguatemi São Paulo mall. Focused on the South and Southeastern regions, and Brasília, the company has 11 operation malls and five greenfields projects. Carlos Francisco Ribeiro Jereissati CEO of Grupo Jereissati Recently opened, JK Iguatemi is already part of the architectural landmark of the city of São Paulo, and has brought 23 international brands to Brazil. The mall is part of the grand commercial complex that includes three towers of offices and an entertainment and retail unit, the laboratory for visionary fashion - LAVIF. Established on May 23, 1979, the Jereissati Group began its operations in the textile area and subsequently, diversified its investments in the real estate. 38 LAVIF RESEARCH Born in 2003, the Brazilian Association of Fashion Designers (ABEST) aims to strengthen and promote Brazilian design and fashion. Their main proposal is to assist the development of Brazilian brands of international scope and to ensure the authenticity and creativity of each of them, and disclose the lifestyle of their country, thus contributing to the growth of all segments related to fashion. The brand stands for style, comfort, affordable luxury, and positive energy. The first pair of Havaianas was born in 1962 and since then, the company hasn’t stopped creating regional and international fashion trends. The most famous flipflop in the world has been part of the Oscars since 2003 with an exclusive model given to the nominees. As a nonprofit association, ABEST partnership’s goal is to show that the Brazilian fashion evolved, found its own style and became professional. The idea is to show members of both ABEST and LAVIF the importance of conquering new markets, and developing special collections. Currently ABEST has 56 member brands from all over Brazil, also exporting products to 48 countries. In addition, strategic actions run constantly to enlarge their penetration into new markets around the globe and narrow relationships with those already achieved. The opening of Espaco Havaianas in Sao Paulo embodies Brazil’s envy-inducing climate of constant sun and air by funneling them into a concept flagship store. Limited-edition models flank a tented stand featuring more coveted versions, including the monotone blue classic that helped turn the company’s powdery sand into gold. The famous slogan - “Havaianas - the real ones” is launching its first nightclub, .br. The club conveys the brand’s up-beat mood and magic exploring its ‘darker’ version. It’s impossible to describe using words... you need to see it with your own eyes! RESEARCH LAVIF 39 USERS WHO’S AROUND? São Paulo is a city rich in culture and art. The large scale program of the building in With over two hundred art galleries, museums, São Paulo, the brain of Brazil, will create new and private and public art schools, the city growth opportunities and momentum for the thrives on art and encourages exploration. The change in the national fashion industry. With direct target users are professionals and me- two of the highest-end design and fashion dia; fashion admirers of all ages who wish to shopping malls in the country less then one see and experience something new and excit- mile away, it is inevitable that Itaim Bibi’s trend ing; students, affluent art collectors, tourists, will be followed by international spotlights. and free thinkers. The alliance with national Beyond affecting career or educational direc- designers and brands with the new school of tion, one of the most significant and intangible visionary fashion will support and encourage impacts of studying at the visionary school is new businesses and provide a high level of the students’ increased confidence and vitality. standard for the future. The museum and the They will develop a more sophisticated and ma- runway spaces will become the local point for ture way of looking at the world. They will have fashion conventions, bringing energy and life the understanding and skills to navigate effec- to an otherwise lack luster area in Brazil. tively, humanely and positively across differ- X EXTERIOR VIEW RESEARCH PUBLIC POWERFUL SURPRISING ATTRACTIVE Y Y LAVIF USERS PRIVATE SEMI-PRIVATE ATTRACTIVE SURPRISING POWERFUL Y 40 PRIVACY X USER RELATIONSHIP PRIVATE SEMI-PRIVATE PUBLIC ATTRACTIVE SURPRISING POWERFUL INTERIOR VIEW X X PRIVATE SEMI-PRIVATE PUBLIC Z Y Z Z USER X SPECTACLE RELATIONSHIP RESEARCH LAVIF 41 E AT IV R I-P M SE C LI B PU V G ER CA IFT TIC L FE SH AL IN O & OP CI RC S FO B R U SE CU R B EST LA FA LF- LPT MAT Y AUR TI O PA U IO A N C R RE N NT A KIN G D G AR D E EN USERS WITHIN SPECTACLE X PRIVACY V E W IP L T AU OR OU A L DI KS N IL CA IB TO HO GE R P S G F I BE AL ET RA UM C L E LA AU ER R SS TY Y IA RY ES SP A R T N C PA DO IRC R CK U KI LA N TI G O N H I EL T RA C AT T E IS PR R SU S M O R IG COP C U T VI ON N H ER T Z B P FE VE OH LOU RE W C ON LO R N NC AY L E G VA AD TIC U ES E LL IN AL RO B E G E AT IV PR ER PRIVACY USER SPECTACLE in od d to an e rs ult od g de es m in un r ng th is e, the isti no rs cl x ta oth e ys ea pec b he sa pp a he ll , sp is f t It a d f t a n e lity t o ... at oo t o y in tio Th ta ec ion h g ar et ma p “... to roj ct ‘w is he oci for sum its e p odu han at the l s , in on th pr t wh is rea s t c ..” of ore d, .It of form rec nt. m o s’.. m ar di e n io go ar lis ul or inm ct pe rea rtic ing rta lle un pa rtis nte co - d a ela te l its dve of e ot al r dia ea le a n n e i r tio is c m e mp es e i g e so , cl a ns th s a th ta ut so re to m d n ec b er e in e i an f a the o is sp es, g p Wh s pl s he ag on ... ge im ng ns It the c“T f im am es an e s thi tio ... of du o n ag ch h l va ior on pro mp tio y im ld s, t rea oti av ati in su r e e m h rm e on b o w ag om nt be affi mad ry c im c ie ic nt y la l t be fic o se ad ro a- er, ef pn re lre co p iz hy mni ce a d its al ow i n ci f p le. o o e c o ch a sp n ta a h f n ic o al io ec tio n” ci at sp us h e c tio so liz e th w bl ti a st cia f th is ity em om l so r l a e de pe o e v ol e s oot cl cti ens dip hic oth he e arc y T t he th r ta a e “T n, the ec ed th is th ier ver ed. os tio at sp liz or It f h e e m m is he cia s f rs. n o her har the T e k e tio w is re, sp pea oth nta elf, ch he s e se its ee is th pre to f sp ern ell” re ty o od w e ci rm t m as fo os ic m rcha a PO W DESIGNERS MEDIA STUDENTS FASHIONISTS PUS=XYZ SÃO PAULO BR AREA 3,287,000 SQ.MI. POP . 192 MILLION BRAZIL LANG. BRAZILIAN PORTUGUESE ECON. 6th IN THE WORLD AKA. NATURAL ENV., SOCCER, WILDLIFE, SAMBA. SP AREA 3,067 SQ.MI. POP . 20 MILLION ECON. 1st IN THE COUNTRY AKA. BUSINESS CITY, TERRA DA GAROA (Land of Drizzle). SP Brazil is comprised of twenty-six states and is The country has a mixed economy with abundant São Paulo (SP) is located in the Southeastern re- the only Latin American nation that derives its lan- natural resources. Its economic industries include gion of Brazil, in southeastern São Paulo state and guage and culture from Portugal. The native inhab- textiles, shoes, chemicals, cement, lumber, iron ore, it is also the state’s capital. SP state is surrounded itants mostly consist of the nomadic Tupí-Guarani steel, aircraft, motor vehicles and barts. Its chief by Minas Gerais in North, Parana in South, Rio de Indians. It has a population of over 193 million peo- crops are coffee, soybeans, wheat, rice, corn, sug- Janeiro in East, and Mato Grosso do Sul in West. ple. The early explores brought back a wood that arcane, cocoa, and citrus. The city is located on a plateau that is part of the produced a red dye, called pau-brasil (brazil-wood), from which the land received its name. Portugal began colonization in 1532 and made the area a royal colony. The country is home to two of the world’s twenty seven current megacities, São Paulo (the 9th largest with 21.1 million) and Rio de Janeiro (12.7 million). Brazil covers nearly half of the South America and is the continent’s largest nation. It ex- In October 2010’s second round of presidential elections, Dilma Roussef became the country’s first woman president. She is expected to follow through with Luiz Inacio’s (aka Lula, he is the first workingclass president, 2002-2010) agenda, but faces the task of improving the country’s education, health, and sanitation systems. Serra do Mar (Portuguese for “Sea Range”), itself a component of the vast region known as the Brazilian Highlands, with an average elevation of around 799 meters (2,621 ft) above sea level, though at a distance of only about 70 kilometers (43 mi) from the Atlantic Ocean. The city is rounded by two main rivers, Tiete and Pinheiros rivers. Both were once important sources of fresh water and leisure for the tends 2,965 mi north-south, 2,691 mi east-west, Brazil participants in well-kown international and borders every nation on the south continent organizations such as G-15, G-24, Interpol, Mer- except Chile and Ecuador. cosul, UN, UNESCO, and the most recent BRIC— The São Paulo metropolitan area has over 10 Brazil is the largest national economy in Latin countries that are all deemed to be at a similar million people within 3,000 sq. mi area and it is the America, the world’s sixth largest economy at stage of newly advanced economic development. largest metropolitan zone in Latin America. As the market exchange rates and the seventh largest in The country has a 9.8% unemployment rate and most ethnically diverse city of the country, hosting purchasing power parity (PPP), according to the 22% of Brazil’s population lives below the nation a large community of European, Asian, Arabian International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. poverty line. and African descendants, all living peacefully. The 44 LAVIF RESEARCH city, only become grossly polluted by raw sewage and industrial. city has a monsoon-influenced humid subtropical climate. In summer, temperatures are between 63 F and 82 F. In winter, are between 52F and 70 F. Because of its elevation, however, SP enjoys a distinctly temperate climate. São Paulo is the 10th richest city in the world, and is expected to be the 6th in 2025. Its gross domestic product (GDP) in 2006 was over R$282 billion. The city is also unique among Brazilian cities for its large number of foreign corporations. Many analysts point to SP as an important global city, even though this categorization can be criticized considering its serious problems of social exclusion and spacial segregation. Despite being the most important financial centre of the country, SP also presents a high concentration of shopping centers. You can find practically anything there. Imported goods can be expensive, but look out for Brazilian-made bargains in all categories. It’s not a hard task to spend some time in one of the 50 shopping malls while in Brazil. RESEARCH LAVIF 45 DASLU THE FASHION EMPIRE “Once upon a time there was a little shop belonging to friends that grew to the size of the world. This is neither a fairy tale, nor an attack of folie de grandeur.” —Daslu, description on the website. D aslu (pronounced daz-LOO) is a posh multi-brand boutique store and it’s known as the “fashion designers Mecca” free espresso, biscotti and sparkling water at bars of Brazil as it houses more than 60 fashion labels. or spaces, vertical circulations and communication It is the place where Brazilian socialites, ranging between floors, which allows its form to be directed from multi-millionaire soccer players to conglom- by its new functions. Counting all seven floors (two erate bigwigs shop for the latest accessories and basements and five public floors) the total area clothing. It is also a renowned shopping institution of construction passes 600,000 sq. ft. and it has in South America for being a “purveyor” in chic and played an important role in the Brazilian fashion in- exclusive couture. dustry. Taking it in advantage, the implementation When opened, you wouldn’t plan on walking to Daslu. It’s against the rules to arrive on foot at São 46 LAVIF RESEARCH spread throughout the store. The building clearly expresses its character through the immense interi- of LAVIF will create an irony on a sense that “the old international empire” is over and “made in Brazil”, Paulo’s most over-the-top shopping emporium. A perhaps by a foreign designer, can be high fashion. taxi is one option, though a much chicer option is to Daslu (now LAVIF) is part of the commercial arrive by chopper at the rooftop heliport. The store complex composed by the Santander tower, the JK itself looks like an all-white Roman villa on steroids. IGUATEMI shopping and its two office buildings, Servants in black-and-white uniforms dole out the JK towers. RESEARCH LAVIF 47 DASLU THE ORIGINAL PROJECT SITE PLAN NO SCALE NORTH ELEVATION (FRONT) NO SCALE WEST ELEVATION (SIDE) NO SCALE 48 LAVIF RESEARCH RESEARCH LAVIF 49 DASLU SECOND BASEMENT NO SCALE FIRST BASEMENT NO SCALE GROUND FLOOR NO SCALE 50 LAVIF IF RESEARCH RESE RESEARCH LAVIF 51 DASLU FIRST FLOOR NO SCALE F OR FOURTH FLOOR NO SCALE SECOND FLOOR NO SCALE FIFTH FLOOR NO SCALE THIRD FLOOR NO SCALE ROOF TOP NO SCALE 52 LAVIF IF RESEARCH RESE RESEARCH LAVIF 53 JECT PRO PROGRAMMING BUILDING ANALYSIS DEFINE PROGRAM & FIVE SPACES ADAPT PROGRAM INTO THE BUILDING ROOF TOP HLZ STORAGE EVENTS AND AUDITORIUM “What we were really trying to do was to make something that had the firmness, the scale, the gravity, or the sense of gravity, that potentially a piece of architecture does – having those qualities that a building produces, of really challenging you and pressurizing the space in such a way that it would be a kind of an equivalent to a building.” —Michael Maltzan 56 LAVIF PROJECT MANUFACTURES AND OFFICES CREATE CIRCULATION & VISUAL CONNECTIONS RETAIL LOBBY : 19,265 LIBRARY : 25,474 RETAIL : 52,456 RUNWAY : 13,561 NIGHTCLUB : 18,768 CLASSROOMS NIGHTCLUB ACCESS LIBRARY AND COMPUTER LABS BOH AND LOADING DOCK PARKING LOWER LOBBY PARKING UNDERSTAND EACH SPACE AND ITS NEEDS PROJECT LAVIF 57 Parking Storage Lobby Access Lounge Gift Shop Café Parking Access Loading dock Concierge Nightclub Access General ADM Restrooms Storage rooms Library Workshop classromms Lab rooms Library ADM Auditorium Cafeteria Library Lounge Restrooms Storage rooms Shops Seating area Concierge Personalite Sevices VIP rooms VIP Lounge Manufactures Designers’ offices Retail ADM Restrooms Storage rooms Shops Seating area Concierge Personalite Sevices VIP rooms VIP Lounge Manufactures Designers’ offices Retail ADM Restrooms Storage rooms Events room I Events room II Events room III Lounge Coquetel room Conference room Backstage rooms Restrooms Storage rooms Nightclub Lounge HLZ VIP Access Backstage rooms Restrooms Nightclub ADM Storage rooms PARKING PARKING ACCESS A ACCESS EDUCATIONAL R RETAIL MANUFACTURE M RETAIL MANUFACTURE EVENTS ENTERTAINMENT 2nd BASEMENT B 1st BASEMENT GROUND G FLOR F 1st F FLOOR 2nd FLOOR F 3rd FLOOR 4th FLOOR 5th FLOOR 176,418 1 176,418 76,992 7 7 73,464 73,464 7 73,464 7 6 62,129 47,168 LOWER LOBBY LIBRARY RUNWAY NIGHTCLUB 6,867 6 12,268 15,141 7,240 18,768 58 LAVIF PROJECT TOTAL PROJECT DESIGN DEVELOPEMENT 759,517 60,284 PROJECT LAVIF PROGRAMMING Parking Storage 59 CONCEPT CONCEPTUAL THREAD The project describes the architecture’s role in the formation of a Brazilian visionary fashion identity through exploring fashion and architecture. In a complex matrix of experience and information, each interior space questions the relationship between fabric (fashion) and building (architecture) and works as a thread from which they must gather and weave together all the strings relevant to this project. There is a significant relationship of promoting fashion exhibition, retail and education through the architectural manipulation of the environment. During the conceptual development, I was lead to an investigation of beauty and how it can be translated in each discipline analyzed. The existing structure was adjusted to receive the new design while scale, textures, and colors of the elements applied were magnified when light intensity was added performing incredible effects, impacting the final result. When designing to host a fashion focused program, it is important to remember how fast the trends change. A simple collection developed and launched at LAVIF, can hold an extensive impact onto the architectural decisions, such as moving important walls or occupying unusual spaces. Therefore, the idea of creating a “white canvas” and flexible space was present in every move and in all the spaces. LAVIF’s conceptual thread includes the literal, metaphorical and allegorical interpretations of fabric in different scenarios. It’s used as a set of rules to discover the warp and weft of each space based on the big idea and its programmatic needs. The art of digital fabrication and parametric design were also tested to include a deep meaning into the environment that will inspire clients, users and provoke many visionary trends. 60 LAVIF PROJECT It’s hard to beat a clever use of negative space in logo design. It’s no coincidence that the most memorable logos are also the most simple in appearance. The intention is to create an identitiy to be instantly recognisable, acting as a memorable identifier and supporting LAVIF’s philosophy. LAVIF’s logo design has influences from its conceptual thread diagram and the city’s sidewalk pattern. There’s a deeper meaning behind the two ribbons-like coming together to form the acronym. One side is always black or white, the back side of the ribbon allows the customization of the logo according to the season’s campaign. In a place where both national and international cultures colapse, the big idea of flexibility and a white canvas of the project is extended to its brand logo. PROJECT LAVIF 61 CONCEPTUAL THREAD FABRIC M E TA P H O R CONNECTIONS LOBBY A N A L O G Y GATHER LAYER L I T E R A L P UBLIC S PA C E P RIVATE EXPERIENCE LIBRARY MOVEMENT WARP CIRCULATION FUNCTIONALITY CURTAIN PATTERNS SKIN RUNWAY P RIVATE S PA C E P UBLIC EXPERIENCE WEFT PEOPLE FLOW RUNWAY MUSIC NIGHTCLUB PINHEIROS FREEWAY NACOES UNIDAS AVENUE CONSTRUCTION DOCUMENTS LAVIF SITE PLAN 0 5 10 25 50 100 GO JUSCELINO KUBITSCHEK AVENUE ME SD EC AR VAL HO STR EE T SANTANDER TOWER JK TOWER NORTH JK IGUATEMI SHOPPING JK TOWER SOUTH Site Plan 1st Basement LOWER LOBBY Ground Floor LOBBY 1st Floor LIBRARY 2nd Floor 3rd Floor 4th Floor RUNWAY 5th Floor NIGHTCLUB CHEDID JAFET STREET 6th Floor 64 LAVIF PROJECT PROJECT LAVIF 65 A B C D E F G H I J K N O P Q R S T U V X Y Z 1 A A 2 3 4 5 6 7 GROUND FLOOR LEVEL +0’ - 0” 0 5 66 LAVIF PROJECT 10 25 50 100 PROJECT LAVIF 67 A B C D E F G H I J K N O P Q R S T U V X Y Z 1 A A 2 4 5 6 7 1ST FLOOR LEVEL +15’ - 0” 0 5 68 LAVIF PROJECT 10 25 50 100 PROJECT LAVIF 69 A B C D E F G H I J K N O P Q R S T U V X Y Z 1 A A 2 4 5 6 7 2ND FLOOR LEVEL +27’ - 0” 0 5 70 LAVIF PROJECT 10 25 50 100 PROJECT LAVIF 71 A B C D E F G H I J K N O P Q R S T U V X Y Z 1 A A 2 4 5 6 7 3RD FLOOR LEVEL +39’ - 0” 0 5 72 LAVIF PROJECT 10 25 50 100 PROJECT LAVIF 73 A B C D E F G H I J K N O P Q R S T U V X Y 1 A A 2 4 5 6 7 4TH FLOOR LEVEL +51’ - 0” 0 5 74 LAVIF PROJECT 10 25 50 100 PROJECT LAVIF 75 I J N O Q S T V Y 1 A 2 A 4 5 6 5TH FLOOR LEVEL +69’ - 0” 0 5 76 LAVIF PROJECT 10 25 50 100 PROJECT LAVIF 77 A A ROOF TOP LEVEL +84’ - 0” 0 5 78 LAVIF PROJECT 10 25 50 100 PROJECT LAVIF 79 + 84’ - 0” + 69’ - 0” + 51’ - 0” + 39’ - 0” + 27’ - 0” + 15’ - 0” + 0’ - 0” - 9’ - 0” - 18’ - 0” SECTION A-A 0 5 10 25 50 100 NIGHTCLUB RUNWAY RETAIL RETAIL RETAIL RETAIL LIBRARY SECTION A-A SCHEMATIC CIRCULATION PROGRAM LOBBY LOBBY LOWER LOBBY RE-SKINNING COMMERCIAL COMPLEX JK TOWERS JK IGUATEMI SHOPPING Sleek and asymmetrical, with gleaming white side is constituted of the same bluish glass used walls, media façade, and a soaring atrium, LAVIF in all the buildings of the complex combined with will be a beacon of white modernity amid the color- a new technology called GraphExeter, a one-atom- ful sprawl of São Paulo. The new form ia an approach founded within the harmonious balance of technology, materials, and form of its context. The simplicity is dissolved when, in a surprising hour of the day, the technol- GraphExeter is the thinnest substance capable of conducting electricity and it can be used for the creation of ‘smart’ mirrors or windows, with computerized interactive features. Since this material is skin is structured by carbon fiber composite frames also transparent over a wide light spectrum, it per- to integrate the varied surface façade. The front mits day lighting inside the building. LAVIF PROJECT LAVIF thick material, made of graphene. ogy behind the glass curtain it is revealed. The new 84 SANTANDER TOWER “It’s more interesting to have just a picture of a small detail - then you can dream all the rest around it. Because when you see the whole thing, what is there to imagine?” —Dries Van Noten PROJECT LAVIF 85 EXTERIOR LOBBY INTEGRATED LOBBY CIRCULATION CONCEPT Fabric: Connections Warp: Circulation FLOOR LEVEL Weft: People Besides the ground floor, the lobby is constructed with five different levels (including the first basement) and it is conceived as a single space. Without clear distinctions, the floors are connected with the impact generated by the oversized glass screen. The heart of the building is, in fact, represented by the catwalks and staircases. Structured in steel and cladded in a shiny metallic layer that highlights its exceptional sculptural presence, it is an entity that is ambitious to convey in terms of any normal geometric shape that originates from a vortex with great dynamism, surrounded by the different surfaces that accommodate the LAVIF world. What is really important to a space as large and dense as the lobby is that it has performances and exhibitions that are always active. The lobby itself serves as a stage for the public, the environment and the architecture. There’s a choreography performed capable of creating new understandings and, therefore, new realities. In this space, the “metaphor is not merely a matter of language; it is a matter of conceptual structure. And conceptual structure is not merely a matter of the intellect -it involves all the natural dimensions of our experience, including aspects of our sense experience: color, shape, texture, sound, etc.”, according to Lakoff and Johnson, authors of Metaphors We Live By. The movement of the ribbons that constitutes the catwalks, skimming each floor, disenchants the possibility to recognize the geometry. The general layout of every floor develops according to the different flexures of the ribbons, creating a space controlled by the vortex. 90 LAVIF PROJECT CHANGE & PATTERNS NEW HEADQUARTERS OF THE IED, BARCELONA by Franconi Gonzalez Architects HARD SURFACES CLEAN PARTITIONS GEN SYS LABORATORIES, Sci-fi Movie Concept Art of Rise of the Planet of the Apes TRANSPARENCY & DAYLIGHTING SECURE ENTRANCE ALICE TULLY HALL, NYC by Diller Scofidio + Renfro EXPOSED STRUCTURE INTERESTING CIRCULATION PROJECT MAXII MUSEUM, ROME by Zaha Hadid Architects PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT The lobby is washed with natural light by day. The clear glass wall offers a glorious view of the new landscaped park along the Pinheiros River, and it 1st BASEMENT + Gd FLOOR NO SCALE becomes a window to promote interior and exterior interactions. Although it’s an angular space, nobody walks turning at 90 degrees. The dynamic design of the ceiling, floor patterns, and the fluidity of the vertical circulations smooth that transition and create contrast with the regular structural system. 92 LAVIF PROJECT PROJECT LAVIF 93 LOBBY As a tribute to the traditional Sao Paulo sidewalk, the black and white pattern is made of Portuguese mosaic. At some moments, it is interrupted by a café and gift shop entrance, a futuristic concierge zone or elevator lounges, which can be confused as special exhibition of classic Brazilian furniture. Names like Sergio Rodrigues, the Campana brothers, and the architect Paulo Mendes da Rocha, represent the modern and contemporary Brazilian current collection. LOBBY 96 LAVIF PROJECT PROJECT LAVIF 97 LOBBY 98 LAVIF PROJECT PROJECT LAVIF 99 LOBBY 100 LAVIF PROJECT PROJECT LAVIF 101 LOBBY 102 LAVIF PROJECT PROJECT LAVIF 103 LIBRARY INTERACTIVE & LIBRARY INFORMATIVE TRANSPARENCY CONCEPT & LIGHTNESS Fabric: Gathering Warp: Functionality Weft: Flow Libraries have been around in various forms for thousands of years and have become a cornerstone of activities for the communities in which they exist. Even though the function of what’s happening inside will change, the library itself will remain a powerful entity around which the communities will rally. An important role of LAVIF’s library is the unique archive of all the in-house art. It is necessary to clarify that as a digital library, the only physical elements archived are samples of materials used in collections developed by in-house designers. The recessed entrance showcases a floor to ceiling LED screen that welcomes passersby a hint of what they can discover inside. A sculptural black volume gathers both sides of the library, serving as a contrasting background to the gallery and the bright spaces. Visitors are taken to a short exhibition exploring an exclusive range of that season’s designers’ work.*** Members are allowed to enter into the hightech research and workspace room. The metal and cool look tends to read very futuristic. Bright whites, shades of gray and rich blue accents, create a special atmosphere with sleek materials. A wide clear glass wall separates the archive from the noisy area. If activated, it turns into a human sized touchscreen wall that allows several people to work at the same time, providing high level of interaction between them. The same feature is found in the stations. A robotic system delivers the material to a common point provoking users to communicate and collaborate with each other. 106 LAVIF PROJECT INTERACTIVE DIGITAL WALL, SCI-FI MOVIE Iron Man Movie PUBLIC USE SOFT MATERIAL PICNURBIA, VANCOUVER by Loose Affiliates MATERIAL SUPRIMENT WORKSPACE LAPA TEXTILE MANUFACTURE, SAO PAULO Founded in 1855 ROBOTIC SYSTEM SPACE PERCEPTION PROJECT LAVIF 107 JOE AND RIKA MANSUETO LIBRARY, CHICAGO by Helmut Jahn 1st FLOOR NO SCALE Inspired by the antique textile manufactures, the and intensities. In the quiet reading and cafe zone, material transporting path is suspended above the a flexible nano-porous blanket covers the chill out stations, working as an extension of the workspace. niche facing the city. Silica-based aerogel particles The ceilings are covered in recycled aluminum pan- are incorporated into a high value blanket that is els, originally developed as parts for cars. With the ambience of a laboratory, information and functionality come together in different ways 108 LAVIF PROJECT non-toxic, supple, low dusting, and waterproof, making it ideal to perform in a space where people react in distinctive ways. PROJECT LAVIF 109 LIBRARY LIBRARY 112 LAVIF PROJECT PROJECT LAVIF 113 LIBRARY 114 LAVIF PROJECT PROJECT LAVIF 115 LIBRARY 116 LAVIF PROJECT PROJECT LAVIF 117 LIBRARY 118 LAVIF PROJECT PROJECT LAVIF 119 RUNWAY RUNWAY CONCEPT Fabric: Layering LAYERING OF Warp: Curtain (history) Weft: Runway THREADS In fashion, presentation matters. Show venues these days are every bit as important as the collections to the statement a designer makes. It is a prime opportunity to flex their creative muscles and stand out from the crowd. Fashion shows are all about a heterogeneous army being thrown together for a short time in a small space. In this setting, people expect something different. There’s potential to take them a little outside of their comfort zone. As a leasing space for events, this show takes place in the first half of the room, leaving the other for backstage. Layering is the concept that questions the peculiar spectacle of the catwalk. Who is the spectator and who is part of the spectacle? By dressing the void, a fabric is a layer between body and space. Here, the present audience is seated between past and future. Bradley Quinn explains that “reconstructed architecture is in part a monument to the antecedent style it preserves, highlighting the role of architecture as a repository for collective memory. As both garments and buildings convey these abstract messages within specific spatial frameworks, they forge new links between memory and space.” The existing façade and crown moldings are maintained as a curtain to the corridor that gives access to the space. Bright colors and lights tie these trends together and is alternately covered to create different moods. The dramatic blue lighting guides the crowd between three seating sessions. Fashion space is a synthesis between fiction and realism. In the fusion between them, the act of forming an illusion is performed by a repetition of the catwalk structure projected onto the panel that covers the runway. 122 LAVIF NEEDLE BOX SEWING ROOM OF MOVIE COCO AVANT CHANEL by Anne Fontaine EXPOSED STRUCTURE AND RAW FINISHES HIGHER CATWALK A/W PRADA MENSWEAR 2008 by OMA / AMO colaboration MODELS & RUNWAYS INTERACTION BLACK & WHITE PICNURBIA, VANCOUVER by Loose Affiliates SEE THROUGH SECURE AND FAST SET UP STRUCTURE PROJECT CHRIST THE REDEEMER STATUE, RIO DE JANEIRO by engineer Heitor Costa & sculpter Paul Landowski When the show starts this panel retracts, fol- the human psyche, revealing that the ‘mood’ creat- lowed by the walk of the first model. The double lev- ed by fashion photography often relies more on the el scaffolding-like structure surprises the audience backdrop context than the models or the clothes when they realize that the starting point is located themselves. Following this, light tubes are layered on the upper level of the runway. Behind the two along the catwalk structure that creates an optical LED screens, the models make their way down giv- illusion effect. The scaffolding inspiration comes ing the spectators time to catch every detail of the from an idea to (re)construct an architectural tool show. Architecture often works as an analogy for that is used when a change is made in buildings. 124 LAVIF PROJECT 4th FLOOR NO SCALE PROJECT LAVIF 125 RUNWAY By layering several metallic towers, the configuration of the room is adapted according to the tenants’’ needs. The runway is broken down into individual 8x8 feet pieces that slide through the suspended track, making it easier for storage and to create a wide variety of Option A Option B Option C INTERIOR ELEVATION RUNWAY OPTION A 126 LAVIF PROJECT PROJECT LAVIF 127 RUNWAY RUNWAY PROJECT LAVIF 131 RUNWAY 132 LAVIF PROJECT PROJECT LAVIF 133 RUNWAY 134 LAVIF PROJECT NIGHTCLUB TROPICAL ATMOSPHERE NIGHTCLUB CONCEPT Fabric: Movement UNIQUE Warp: Patterns & Forms ILLUMINATION Weft: Music In a nation with new venues springing up left, right, and center to channel the cash spilling out the pockets of its young, hedonistic upper class. It is refreshing to come across a club that’s been designed to deliver the rhythmic pulse its people are so innately in tuned with, for all the right reasons. It’s not a new idea to find nightclubs at hotels or commercial buildings, but as stated by Roger Thomas, a secret ‘it-club’ is described by “drama, mystery, and memories. After all, what designers have to make is an experience. If the users don’t go out with a memory, it is all down the drain.” A cross-discipline team was recruited to brainstorm this space and the goal is to show design in action, not on a pedestal. The elegant and futuristic style is combined with the sponsor’s culture. Havaianas, the Brazilian most famous flip-flop brand in the world, has the ability to create experiences and invest in a brand that works both globally and locally. The company steps into a new market with the same consum- MARINE BIOLUMINESCENCE, ATLANTIC OCEAN by a phytoplankton known as dinoflagellates PARTY EXPERIENCE & EXCLUSIVE ELEMENTS URBAN BEACH LIFSTYLE NEW YEARS EVE, RIO DE JANEIRO by Copacabana Palace Hotel TRADITIONAL ELEMENTS BRANDING ers, launching its first nightclub “.br”. The name comes from Internet country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for Brazil. It emphasizes good product technology mixed with art and design to promote the strong brand that touches consumers’ hearts. It also shows how creativity, innovative thinking and perseverance can create a buzz that transcends one’s initial territory. There are several positive cultural meanings that users around the club associate with the brand and Brazilian cultures, such as vibrant colors, sensuality, joy, fun, nature and sense of humor. 138 LAVIF PROJECT HAVAIANAS STORE, SAO PAULO by Isay Weinfeld SOUND & LIGHT SYSTEM INTERIOR x EXTERIOR RELATIONSHIP PROJECT LAVIF 139 D.EDGE, SAO PAULO by Muti Randolph (lighting) and Renato Ratier It all starts at the ground level, where an elevator tower takes clubbers to the highest level of the building. When stepping out, they’re surprised with the movement generated by a wave of lights that morphs into the entry hall. It was developed based on the data captured by a strange sound of the water movement named ‘bloop’, produced towards the ocean bottom. The wave motion spreads throughout ceilings and walls that sweep up enclosing the spaces with a unifying gesture. 5th FLOOR NO SCALE Many inspirations were carefully picked for each area developed. From under the sea creatures, to the traditional fireworks at the beach on New Year’s 140 LAVIF PROJECT PROJECT LAVIF 141 NIGHTCLUB INTERIOR ELEVATION RUNWAY OPTION A 142 LAVIF PROJECT eve, to Muti Radolphs’ explorations of time and indoors provide a unique experience fusing stimu- space relationship through music and interactive lating and conceptual lighting, polished materials generative videos. It is all synchronized with the and customized furniture with a state of art. An ex- movement of the users. clusive VIP lounge faces the exotic jellyfish tank, Two main lounges, a fifty feet long bar, an out- and is available for the elegant and sophisticated, door deck, and a breath taking dance floor emit a to truly indulge, at the most fashionable experience unique glow and energy, giving guests priceless in Brazil. The legacy of ‘.br’ is not about today, to- views of the linear park along Pinheiros river. The morrow or next year. It’s about the century ahead. PROJECT LAVIF 143 NIGHTCLUB 144 LAVIF PROJECT PROJECT LAVIF 145 NIGHTCLUB NIGHTCLUB 148 LAVIF PROJECT PROJECT LAVIF 149 NIGHTCLUB 150 LAVIF PROJECT PROJECT LAVIF 151 NIGHTCLUB 152 LAVIF PROJECT PROJECT LAVIF 153 NIGHTCLUB 154 LAVIF PROJECT PROJECT LAVIF 155 FINAL THOUGHTS For decades Brazil’s tropical chic has enchanted the outside world in a variety of forms; from the white concrete sweeps of Oscar Niemeyer’s architecture, inspired by Rio’s undulating mountains, to the rubber Havaianas flip-flops. But not everybody in the industry accepts the notion that there is a typically Brazilian style of design. It is important to mention the significance of the idea of “Brazilian-ness”. A global exchange of influences means Brazilian designers find their inspiration as much abroad as at home. I believe there is no such thing as typically Brazilian or typically London design. There are Americans doing excellent oriental art, and Brazilians making European designs. “The interesting thing about Brazilian designers is that they concentrate less on technique and focus more on artistic freedom. I think that all professions here are more based on creativity and the natural intensity of our people and less on studies and rules”, says Julia Bolliger, head of journalism at magazine Zupi. 156 LAVIF CONCLUSION CONCLUSION LAVIF 157 SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY - “Malls r us”. Dir. Klodawsky, Helene, Documen-Holmes, Kevn. “Creativity Bytes: A Brief Guide tary. DVD, 2010. 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