Currently viewing the category: "Design & Architecture"

For “Decoration and Design Expo” held in Sydney, Xanita Australia supplied 16mm unprinted X-Board to Environa Studio, a leading Sydney-based sustainable architecture practice.

A 15m² “micro-maisonette” prototype was constructed, which will later be repulped back into paper for re-use, through normal paper-recycling channels.

The two greatest challenges facing residential design are sustainability and affordability; using X-Board to construct architectural prototypes is efficient and sustainable.MDF and particle board would have gone to landfill. The prototype was made to test ideas and can be folded away or rearranged after use, depending on the function required.

X-Board was a popular design medium  at South Africa’s annual top design expo, Design Indaba 2011.

Head On Design: X-Board animal head sculptures
Woodheads: X-Board Clock
Earthchild: Eco-friendly X-Board decorative trees

Wozela: X-Board exhibition booth

Art South Africa: Exhibition booth
Aidan Bennetts Design and Furnspace3D: Exhibition booth and furniture
Student design: Veneered chair with X-Core centre

Edcon (Pty) Ltd, a leading clothing, footwear and textiles retailing group in South Africa, selected X-Board for an in-store visual merchandising display at Legit clothing, located in Canal Walk, Cape Town.Large, three-dimensional letters were cut from X-Board and the edges were painted white using standard water-based paint.

The lightweight word cut-outs were speedily installed on-site, by simply arranging them above the clothing racks in the store- a perfect example of a stylish, hassle-free and eco-friendly short-term retail display.

 

Head On Design’s X-Board sculptures: An ironic twist on the hunting trophies us as South Africans love, or loathe.
From her studio in Cape Town, Joanna Orr of Head On Design has explored this concept by creating wall-mounted African animal sculptures, all of which exude an Afro-chic elegance. The pieces are made almost entirely from environmentally-friendly X-Board Print, for those who appreciate the full irony!
Joanna has now started working with local artists to create a new range of sculptures painted in a style that embraces current African trends. Sculptures are sold as originals or as prints, with the artist’s signature visible on the artwork.
Currently available are the kudu (available in large or small) the buffalo and the sable antelope. Sculptures come pre-assembled or flat-packed and commissions are welcome.
Please visit www.headondesign.co.za for more information.

Xanita recently collaborated with Aidan Bennetts Design, Stephen Lasker Design and Furnspace3D to help produce their booth exoskeleton and an octagonal slot-in-slot tree structure for this year’s Decorex exhibition, held at the Cape Town International Convention Centre.

‘Furnspace3D and Aidan Bennetts Design teamed up again this year to communicate the effectiveness of 3D visualization tools and services in the design industry. Our partnership thrives on collaboration and we were excited to be able to work with Xanita for this event. The full colour print “popped” magnificently on X-Board and the logos really came to life. A key installation was the X-Board slot-in-slot tree; this dynamic installation designed by Aidan Bennetts Design towered metres into the air, showcasing the combined 3D visualizations.

The aim of this piece is to re-use it at all activations, and “grow” the tree by adding more and more pieces as we go along.

The lightweight nature and excellent printability of the material demonstrated the uniqueness of this unusual design to full advantage. X-Board is made from 97% recycled kraft and is able to be recycled after use, making it an ideal substrate for short-term exhibition and event furniture and displays.

CKIE (pronounced seeky) is a resource that allows product designers to gather the support they need to complete their projects.

It’s also a place to discover and obtain the world’s newest products just before they reach the market.

Devised by a group of professors in 1977, C = f(K, I, E) is the equation for creativity. It states that creativity (C) is a function of knowledge (K), imagination (I), and evaluation (E). Cool, eh?

It’s global, open to everyone in the world because design is international and not unique to any one region on earth.  CKIE is also product-focused, so the visitors here are all coming together specifically for product designs. With CKIE, project creators also get a dedicated account manager, someone who supports them from concept to reality and makes sure they’re not alone. And since good ideas deserve to be spread, with Yanko Design’s help, projects will be accessible by the millions of readers who follow Yanko Design every month.

It’s a pretty simple process:

1. Designers begin the process by pitching their product ideas on CKIE.

2. People learn about projects and support the ones they’re interested in.

3. If a project meets its funding goal by the time its funding deadline is reached, the money is transferred to the project creator.

4. Later, once the designer completes their project, backers receive rewards that correspond to the amount of their initial contribution.

Because they can get awesome rewards! Project creators always offer some form of compensation to the backers who help support their ideas — while the rewards vary from project to project, the finished product itself is always among them.

The project creator keeps 100% ownership of all rights.

http://www.ckie.com/

Polytope, by James Hurd, is an environmentally-conscious flat-pack seating system ideal for temporary seating needs. Comes pre-cut, flat-packed and can be assembled in 15-30 seconds. Polytope is light for easy stacking and redeployment, allowing for dynamic use of space. The shape of Polytope allows for various seating configurations and opportunities for branding.

CREDITS - Thomas Hurd
Core 77 – JURY COMMENTS

While so many students seem to create problems rather than solve them, it was refreshing to find a simple idea tackled with confidence. This stackable stool is made from affordable and recyclable materials and would be cheap to produce on a commercial scale. Its assembly, from flatpack to completion, is satisfying and quick. It’s strength is evident and its shape more appealing than a simple box. Its flatpack volume is easy and cheap to transport, making it ideal for temporary events or when conventional seating runs the risk of getting damaged or dirty. As a single material product, it can have a justifiably short life and be discarded responsibly through standard recycling schemes. The product can also be easily branded for all manner of events.

Recognizing excellence in all areas of design enterprise, the Core77 Design Awards celebrates the richness of the design profession and its practitioners. For our inaugural year, we present 15 categories of entry, providing designers a unique opportunity to communicate the intent, rigor and passion behind their efforts. From client work to self-initiated projects, entrepreneurial to pro-bono engagements, we embrace a wide diversity of design enterprise: commercial, cultural, social, environmental, or discursive. We welcome projects in all these spheres and honor the time, effort and quality of the endeavors, no matter their provenance.

For this first program, dedicated jury teams based around the globe gathered in eight countries to judge 15 categories of design practice. Results of this year’s awards program will be announced via Live Web Broadcasts. And as a grace note, we honor our winners with a trophy design that truly celebrates the spirit of teamwork.

From all of us at Core77, we congratulate the Winners, Runners-up and Notables, and extend our gratitude to everyone who submitted work and participated in our inaugural year.

 

POLYTOPE X-BOARD SEATING


1. SUMMARIZE THE PROBLEM YOU SET OUT TO SOLVE. WHAT WAS THE CHALLENGE POSED TO YOU? DID IT GET YOU EXCITED AND WHY?

This project was the final piece for a furniture design class. The brief moved away from past years and focused on renewable resources, in this case a relatively new material called Xanita or X-board. The challenge was creating a single seat from no more than one sheet of Xanita which could hold 150kg and be assembled in 30 seconds. An additional challenge was conquering the limits of the material, and discovering how to achieve shapes and structure without compromising the material, not just making another chair out of tubular steel and plywood. This challenge is what I found most exciting as it was real chance to have hands on creative experience, using my hands to design something in 3D from the outset, something I feel designers don’t get enough of a chance to do.

2. WHAT POINT OF VIEW DID YOU BRING TO THE CHALLENGE? WAS THERE ANYTHING ADDITIONAL THAT YOU WANTED TO ACHIEVE WITH THIS PROJECT OR BRING TO THIS PROJECT THAT WAS NOT PART OF THE ORIGINAL BRIEF?

In the previous semester of this class (which was the first time Xanita was used) there was a heavy leaning towards trying to make the material into the conventional sense of a chair, with four legs, a seat and a back. I wanted to move away from this tendency, and create something that still served the purpose, without the blatant assimilation to the status quo. In addition after researching the material the possibilities for branding also emerged, and as such I wanted to create a chair that could take advantage of this, by both the interest generated by the form, but also the availability of branding spaces.

3. WHEN DESIGNING THIS PROJECT, WHOSE INTERESTS DID YOU CONSIDER? (DISCUSS VARIOUS STAKEHOLDERS, AUDIENCES, RETAILING, MANUFACTURING, ASSEMBLY, DISTRIBUTION, ETC., FOR EXAMPLE.)

During this project the interests of the user were always at the forefront of the design process. Ultimately it had to support their weight and be a form (especially regarding standard seat heights) that was comfortable and possible to get in and out of, as attendees don’t generally sit for long periods of time (unless in seminars or similar). The extra play factor that emerged from the design (once even using them as playing dice) was something that I looked to encourage through the branding of the stools. By offering branding spaces this then took the interests of the consumers (those who run the events) to another level, allowing them an extra revenue stream or another way to further extend their (or their sponsors’) brand throughout the event. The ability to stack in ‘totem’ poles and the wide variety of seating arrays also allows the user and the consumer to dynamically modify the feeling of each space that they are placed into by how these arrays direct the use of the space. Lastly, the assembly of each stool was required to be under 30 seconds. This stool can be assembled easily in 30 seconds, and with experience in 15 seconds. Internal arrows (added later in the design refinement) effectively convey a ‘how-to’ assembly guide.

4. DESCRIBE THE RIGOR THAT INFORMED YOUR DESIGN. (RESEARCH, ETHNOGRAPHY, SUBJECT MATTER EXPERTS, MATERIALS EXPLORATION, TECHNOLOGY, ITERATION, TESTING, ETC., AS APPLICABLE.) IF THIS WAS A STRICTLY RESEARCH OR STRATEGY PROJECT, PLEASE PROVIDE MORE DETAIL HERE.

The design process for this product began as usually with a brief and informal research stint into the way people behave at temporary events such as expos and other conferences. The summary was that attendees generally are moving the entire time throughout stalls, and will only briefly stop to have a rest.
A large amount of exploration into the Xanita board through a series of directed esquisses which enabled me to better understand the material and its limits, and how far those limits could be pushed. A very quick process of sketching took place but the real design work came about with the use of quick 3D prototype with paper and card and some experimentation with origami, which gave a realistic impression of the limits of folding the paper and how fitting different pieces would actually work (as paper can be bent without damaging the material where as 10mm thick Xanita doesn’t quite allow this) After the initial concept was chosen the aim to transform it in into a one piece assembly began, which in itself proved to be a design challenge, involving a lot of tinkering with dimensions and structures.
Following this a number of full scale models were produced to test strength, ease of assembly, and crucially, for any critical design flaws or weaknesses, particularly with respect to structural integrity. Minor tweaks were then carried out as well as investigations into additional structural support for heavy duty versions, as well as better ways to convey the assembly of the stool for the consumer.

5. WHAT IS THE SOCIAL VALUE OF YOUR DESIGN? (GLADDENING, EDUCATIONAL, ECONOMIC, PARADIGM-SHIFTING, SUSTAINABLE, LABOR-MINDFUL, ENVIRONMENTAL, CULTURAL, ETC.) HOW DOES IT EARN ITS KEEP IN THE WORLD?

The social value/impact of this stool is a more environmentally responsible response to the constant need for temporary short-use event seating. By using a material that is made from recycled materials and itself is 100% recyclable, this stool can be seen as an example of upcycling. It also allows users to interact with the product and create their own environments through the arrays they create with these seats, almost becoming a practical toy.

6. IF YOU COULD HAVE DONE ONE THING DIFFERENTLY WITH THE PROJECT, WHAT WOULD YOU HAVE CHANGED?

If I had the chance to change one thing differently, I would have started experimenting with card mock-ups from the very start. After almost three years of sketching to convey products, which at a late stage are prototype modelled, it was eye opening just how much starting with 3D could improve the outcome, and show outcomes that I don’t think I would have encountered had I stuck to sketching.

Head On Design’s X-Board sculptures: An ironic twist on the hunting trophies us as South Africans love, or loathe.
From her studio in Cape Town, Joanna Orr of Head On Design has explored this concept by creating wall-mounted African animal sculptures, all of which exude an Afro-chic elegance. The pieces are made almost entirely from environmentally-friendly X-Board Print, for those who appreciate the full irony!
Joanna has now started working with local artists to create a new range of sculptures painted in a style that embraces current African trends. Sculptures are sold as originals or as prints, with the artist’s signature visible on the artwork.
Currently available are the kudu (available in large or small) the buffalo and the sable antelope. Sculptures come pre-assembled or flat-packed and commissions are welcome.
Please visit www.headondesign.co.za for more information.