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Eco Living

Packaging Lamp by David Gardener

August 3, 2010, 9:18 amFiled under: Eco Design > Eco Living — Posted by Eco-Question Editor

Posted by: Eco-Question Editor
Source: David Gardener – www.davidgardener.co.uk
Designed by: David Gardener – www.davidgardener.co.uk
Photo Credit: David Gardener – www.davidgardener.co.uk
Special Thanks: David Gardener – www.davidgardener.co.uk

The Packaging Lamp is designed with a dual use. The main structure of the lamp is constructed from paper pulp and houses all the electronic parts of the lamp in storage, much like an egg box supporting eggs in transit. The bulb, plug, bulb holder and flex are all stored in the central balustrade for storage. The user then opens up the lamp, constructs the electronic components and rearranges them inside to form the working lamp, with no excess packaging to be thrown away. The form seamlessly changes from packaging to product.

 

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Birdhouses By Tom Price

July 28, 2010, 8:31 pmFiled under: Eco Design > Eco Living — Posted by Eco-Question Editor

Posted by: Eco-question Editor
Source: Tom Price – www.tom-price.com
Designed by: Tom Price – www.tom-price.com
Photo Credit: Tom Price – www.tom-price.com
Special Thanks: Tom Price – www.tom-price.com

These birdhouses were commissioned by Arts Co, in collaboration with Phillips de Pury & Co, to raise funds for the charity, Adventure Ecology.

The brief was to create a home for specific species of birds, bats or bees native to the UK using waste material from the Phillips de Pury auction house.

The outer casing for the houses is created by partially melting down plastic water bottle tops – collected after auctions held at Phillips de Pury – to form rigid shell-like hemispheres that reference the cracked eggs of the chicks that will hopefully hatch inside. The silver house was made from discarded Pepsi bottle tops collected from a local recycling centre.

The inner lining is made from coir (coconut hair) and latex, sculpted into a sphere that offers a soft and sheltered environment for rearing chicks.

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Gwanggyo Power Centre Project by MVRDV

July 23, 2010, 9:30 pmFiled under: Eco Design > Eco Living — Posted by Eco-Question Editor

Posted by: Eco-question Editor
Source: MVRDV – www.mvrdv.nl
Photo Credit: © MVRDV – www.mvrdv.nl
Special Thanks:

MVRDV wins Gwanggyo Power Centre Competition, near Seoul, South Korea.

(Rotterdam, December 3rd, 2008) The Daewoo Consortium and the municipality of Gwanggyo announced the MVRDV concept design for a dense city centre winner of the developers competition for the future new town of Gwanggyo, located 35km south of the Korean capital Seoul. The plan consists of a series of overgrown hill shaped buildings with great programmatic diversity, aiming for high urban density and encouragement of further developments around this so-called Power Centre, one of the envisioned two centres of the future new town.

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Cloud Lamps by Yu Jordy Fu

July 22, 2010, 9:03 pmFiled under: Eco Design > Eco Living — Posted by Eco-Question Editor

Posted by: Eco-question Editor
Source: Yu Jordy Fu – www.jordyfu.co.uk
Designed by: Yu Jordy Fu – www.jordyfu.co.uk
Photo Credit: Yu Jordy Fu – www.jordyfu.co.uk
Special Thanks: Yu Jordy Fu – www.jordyfu.co.uk

The Cloud Lamp Story

In 201AD, the Chinese invented paper, a marvelous material with a complex character. For thousands of years we used paper to write, paint and communicate our thoughts, dreams and desires. Paper-cutting is a unique art form, Chinese women use this graceful and intricate media to record the joy and surprises of their lives and to decorate their homes.

Yu Jordy Fu has developed this ancient technique to create expressive and elaborate forms, which break free from the two-dimensional realm to a dreamlike three-dimensional landscape.

These delicate lampshades are inspired by Jordy’s architectural design projects and scale at 1:50, each lamp is a sensational space, they instantly transform the atmosphere of a home. The Cloud Lamp is a unique and exquisite gift.

Cloud Lamps are sustainable: the material is recycled paper, they are handmade and should be used with energy saving light bulbs. By introducing the Chinese paper-cutting tradition into a contemporary art form, the Cloud Lamp is also sustaining a culture.

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Vegetable Light by Peter Marigold

July 21, 2010, 3:22 amFiled under: Eco Design > Eco Living — Posted by Eco-Question Editor

Posted by: Eco-question Editor
Source: Peter Marigold – www.petermarigold.com
Designed by: Peter Marigold – www.petermarigold.com
Photo Credit: Peter Marigold – www.petermarigold.com
Special Thanks: Peter Marigold – www.petermarigold.com

The Vegetable Light is a possible table lamp utilizing a large heavy vegetable as a base. Rather than buying a vegetable for its edible potential, the sculptural form and functional qualities are emphasized and the owner is invited to experiment creatively with different vegetables. Yams, Celeriac and Swedes tend to work best.

The lamp was created as a handmade small studio run of sixteen signed and numbered units for the exhibition Food Marketo. It is available to buy from Design Marketo with variants of switched / un-switched and pink / pearl bulbs.

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Shop Sign Bird Houses by Peter Marigold

Filed under: Eco Design > Eco Living — Posted by Eco-Question Editor

Posted by: Eco-question Editor
Source: Peter Marigold – www.petermarigold.com
Designed by: Peter Marigold – www.petermarigold.com
Photo Credit: Peter Marigold – www.petermarigold.com
Special Thanks: Peter Marigold – www.petermarigold.com

A series of seven bird houses made from salvaged shop signs and crate material. The folds in the material are unmeasured resulting in a series of irregular coloured shapes.

The regularity of forms that populate our modern man made environment are driven by the economical use of materials and machinery. An invitation to use waste material is also an invitation to use wasteful geometry that is non-the less as quick to create as a regular form. Seen together, a logical rhythmic quality seems to appear.

The houses were made for the charity auction ‘The Birds, The Bats & The Bees held at Phillips de Pury & Company held in June 2008. The project is an initiative of Arts Co.

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