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A Place Called Home, London Design Festival 2014

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    A Place Called Home | London Design Festival
    Trafalgar Square, 18-22 September 2014

    Photos by Inexhibit

    London, Trafalgar Square: at half past ten on a Thursday morning, a small crowd assembled between the fountains and the stairway leading to the National Gallery. All watching the workmen that are in a hurry to complete four little colored houses that seem to have popped up from a fairy tale book. They are part of a temporary installation suggestively entitled “A Place Called Home”; the landmark project of the 2014 edition of the London Design Festival.
    The project, supported by Airbnb, is focused on a classic, yet always fascinating, theme of design: what a home is. What makes the difference between a “house” and a “home” and what are the ingredients that create such a distinction?
    Four internationally acclaimed designers were asked to give their answers: Patternity, Jasper Morrison, Raw Edges, and Studioilse. Each provided a reply by proposing his vision of the domestic environment.

    Jasper Morrison
    The home by Jasper Morrison, ironically entitled “House of a Pigeon Fancier” because of its location in the middle of Trafalgar Square, is a bright space aimed to find a precise balance between inside and outside, a comfortable place where each object represents an answer to a well-defined need: sleeping, working, relaxing.

    Raw Edges
    The house conceived by Raw Edges is a kind of mutant home: the internal walls move on tracks thus creating ever-changing spaces that adapt themselves to the needs and requirements of its inhabitants

    Studioilse
    The little blue house designed by Studioilse, with its neon sign on the roof, represents the domestic space by creating an “immersive” environment that adopts various media: writings, and videos projected on the walls depicting different everyday moments, sounds, and fragrances reproducing the smells of a home.

    Patternity
    The house by Patternity represents a metaphor for the Earth, our collective home: people are invited to interact with a large house-shaped kaleidoscope, which creates constantly changing visual patterns by collecting images through a camera, then reproducing in real-time on a monitor fixed on its side.

     

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