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Family Chair
by Lina NordqvistCurating a set of effortlessly mismatched…
Located in Ramat-Hasharon, a suburb of Tel Aviv in Israel, this 2,100-square-foot house was designed by Keren Milchberg Porat for a family of six—a cinematographer and art director and their four children, ranging in age from one to 17 years old. Porat, who heads up the architecture firm Studio ID253, used a slew of recycled and raw materials, strategically located openings to maximize ventilation and natural light, and "circular passages" to create an open and flexible family home that works equally well for entertaining large groups of people—something the family loves to do.
Originally the owners were inspired by prefab techniques and concepts. But "due to the fact that they couldn't find any local Israeli contractor with validated prefab experience, and their budget was too tight to simply fly in a crew from the states or Europe, they decided to go the only way they could—with conventional and traditional building methods popular in Israel," says Porat. "But certain prefab-inspired design elements remained, such as cement floors, industrial roofing, extensive use of large windows, and large deck areas that surround the interior of the house."
Everything about this vacation home is little crazy. For starters, there’s the location. It’s in Israel. In northern Galilee. On the border with Lebanon.
Curating a set of effortlessly mismatched dining chairs can be a difficult task, unless it’s designed that way. Spindle legs and a classic Swedish stick back are the family ties that bind…
With considering the ever-expanding children's market in the modern design realm, the plethora of visitors, tiny people, and exhibitors at The Modern Family Zone at Dwell on Design was not…
Post Fossil: Excavating 21st Century Creation The exhibition will present the work of more than 60 contemporary designers from around the world, illustrating how the design of the future can be…
The city of Bat Yam, Israel, will host “Timing 2010” its second Biennale of Landscape Urbanism. With experimental architecture, art, design, site-specific installations, and landscape…
Family Chair
Curating a set of effortlessly mismatched…
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Wonderful home! Can you tell me who designed the chairs in the kitchen and where they may be available for purchase?
I like the house its different. But there were some disturbing reminders of their lifein war torn areas. They have a "mandatory" anti-bomb shelter. I thought they would have called it a bomb shelter but he said anti. I like the house in the openess of the rooms and no walls between. But that also is a problem in the event that you are looking for some type of privacy for yourself. Your bathroom is very different for me. What separates teh shower from the rest of the bathroom. You would wet your whole floor up. But I like it. Its different.
The desk in the study makes me want to cry. Who makes it?
It's a Leica camera on the desk in the study, no??
To Ron: the chairs are "Thur-op-seat" the designer is unknown ,bought on e-bay. To Pedro: the desk was bought in Habitat few year ago. To MAGF: Yes the camera is Leica MP.
What is that wooden area above the kitchen area. Looks like a piece of plywood? Is this decorative? Clever look.
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