Wednesday, 29 December 2010

Fame Agenda, Retail Design

Luxury, classic motifs and contemporary retail store interior design.
Designed by Australia based designer, Matt Gibson Architecture and Design, the retail store interior design of Fame Agenda in Melbourne Central is inspired by Janet Laurence’s ephemeral artistic layering of photographic architectural images across transparent screens & post modernist art work.
Therefore, the new retail shop interior design is prominently positioned large corner glazing of the new Fame Agenda facade and re-interpret ‘old’ and ‘traditional’ of the interior design in a new and contemporary ways.
The concept for the store also revolved around the idea of transparency and illusion. The retail store interior design should bring customers minds to a place ‘in-between’ interior and exterior. As the visitor arrives at the top of the escalators the Fame Agenda façade contains laser printed decals applied to the glass referencing classic motifs of historic buildings and offering partly transparent, translucent and opaque elements.
Retail Store Interior Design Fame Agenda Matt Gibson Australia Classic Contemporary

Monday, 27 December 2010

Richard Chai Shop, White Cubic Interior

Richard Chai shop is temporary retail installations made by Snarkitecture collaboration with designer Richard Chai as part of a series of Fashion House HL23. Carved from the confines of existing structures under the High Line, the cloth store interior design envelops visitors in a glacial cave dug out of a single material.
Architecture of white foam cut by hand to produce erosion and extension of carved wall and ceiling to create a varied landscape for the appearance of Richard Chai’s collection. The range of shelves, niche, hang bars and other times embedded in the form of encouraging the designer to display the curatorial eye.
This cubic temporary architecture building will be open from October 21 to 31, 2010 504 West 24th Street in New York.

white foam cloth store interior decor

Monday, 20 December 2010

Karim Rashid

Karim Rashid - Maijik Cafe - Belgrade

Modern Cafe design in Belgrade, Serbia.  The design is vibrant and has a very unusual style, an inspirational Cafe/Resturant/Bar design.  [Building and construction study for restaurant and bar design]





Diesel Denim Gallery, Tokyo

Ohno Chikara Japanese designers have created installations from Sinato Rolls at Diesel Denim Gallery Aoyama in Minato-ku, Tokyo. Characteristics of materials used for this installation, the aluminum, is that it is very thin and easily bent by hand, but harder than cloth or paper. Therefore has both soft and hard properties. With the winding and sometimes expand the strip, a length of aluminum from the entrance to the back-end store. This store interior design creates a wave form of the beautiful, changing the functions and features as changes in material strength. The quality of flexible material representing quality connection between softness and hardness of architectural clothing.


http://zeospot.com/retail-store-interior-design-rolls-by-chikara-ohno-of-sinato/
modern interior decor store
cloth store modern building design
retail store interior  decorating designmodern store interior ideas photo

Liquid Crystal Glass

Products Using Liquid Crystal Glass

http://www.avantisystemsusa.com/frameless-partitions/liquid-crystal-display.html

Sunday, 19 December 2010

Smart Glass


Smart glass, EGlass, or switchable glass, also called smart windows or switchable windows in its application to windows or skylights, refers to electrically switchable glass or glazing which changes light transmission properties when voltage is applied.
Certain types of smart glass can allow users to control the amount of light and heat passing through: with the press of a button, it changes fromtransparent to translucent, partially blocking light while maintaining a clear view of what lies behind the window. Another type of smart glass can provide privacy at the turn of a switch.
The use of smart glass can save costs for heating, air-conditioning and lighting and avoid the cost of installing and maintaining motorized light screens or blinds or curtains. When opaque, liquid crystal or electrochromic smart glass blocks most UV, thereby reducing fabric fading; for SPD-type smart glass, this is achieved when used in conjunction with low-e low emissivity coatings.
Critical aspects of smart glass include installation costs, the use of electricity, durability, as well as functional features such as the speed of control, possibilities for dimming, and the degree of transparency of the glass.
File:Shtiever 2.jpg