Video: Through office space with giant scissors: installation by Radford Wallis
2024 Author: Richard Flannagan | [email protected]. Last modified: 2023-12-15 23:55
How to divide correctly office spaceif there are no walls in it yet? Of course, this question should be asked to original designers like the studio Radford Wallis, who very clearly showed where to erect the walls using giant felt-tip pen, scotch tape, scissors and a tape measure.
This project (which, by the way, is simply called “Space Division”), one of the many projects of the successful British design agency Radford Wallis, was commissioned by Land Developer, which rented an office on Victoria Street in London. Office space in the end, it should be divided into 4 sections for different companies. The owners of the company decided to demonstrate to potential clients how it would look in an original and visual way, for which they invited the employees of Radford Wallis.
Where boring walls will stand in the future office space shared by scissors, scotch tape, tape measure and pink felt-tip pen. Considering that office work is usually associated with boredom and routine, this project can be considered a breath of fresh air for employees. True, in the end there will still be walls … In the meantime, this project is on a par with Lorenzo Damiani's flying office of the interactive installation “The Journey” in the office center in Australia.
Radford Wallis is a highly successful London-based design firm whose quirky designs have appealed to the likes of Yahoo, Channel 4, the Financial Times and more. From 2006 to the present, the company regularly receives awards for its various projects, of which there are a great many, and all of them can be viewed on the agency's website.
Recommended:
Space for creativity: giant drawings in Japan's rice fields
Planting will begin soon in the rice fields of Japan, and some of them will turn into giant images of national heroes and Western pop icons in the fall. The authors of these incredible drawings are not ambitious contemporary artists, but the most ordinary farmers
Office dress code with a designer touch. Office Wear Project by Ted Sabarese
Friday is a free day with jeans and sneakers, T-shirts and bright blouses, neckline and black tights, and the rest of the four days, please, long for classic tailored suits and equally classic shoes. Approximately the same fate awaits almost everyone who is lucky enough to work in modern offices with modern bosses, where they observe office style and stiffness, called strict discipline and dress code. Reminds of junior grades with a mandatory form, which, however
I can see right through. A series of unusual photographs of Beijing through the silhouettes on the window
Some masters and lovers of photography argue that you need to hunt for a good shot for a long time, and sometimes even follow it to distant lands, in the snows of Antarctica, under the hot African sun, in the Amazon forests or in the Alpine mountains. In some ways they are right, and indeed, every week we admire the magical photographs from National Geographic, taken in different parts of the world. But talented photographer Jasper James, based in China, behind his phenomenal shots
Office safari: 25 fun summer photos in a hot office
A new movement is gaining momentum on social networks - office safari. Office workers have fun taking funny pictures in which they miraculously connect the heads of colleagues with the bodies of animals. In our review, the funniest photos from stuffy offices
Through and Through, or X-Ray View of the World: Stunning Pictures by Nick Veasey
"X-ray view of the world" - this is what can be said about the work of Nick Veasey, famous for his unusual works, looking at which, you understand one simple thing, that whatever you say, beauty is a terrible force in the literal and figurative sense this word