Miha Kajzelj, Bivouac for Mountaineers, Kotovo Sedlo in Tamar Valley (2134 m)
Miha Kajzelj, Bivouac for Mountaineers, Kotovo Sedlo in Tamar Valley (2134 m)
An existing bedroom was sacrificed to make room for a first-floor bathroom, which is fitted with a large skylight. The herringbone wall tiles are from Topps Tiles.
An existing bedroom was sacrificed to make room for a first-floor bathroom, which is fitted with a large skylight. The herringbone wall tiles are from Topps Tiles.
In the farmhouse architect Lucy Marston built for her family in Suffolk, England, she balanced off-the-shelf pieces, such as a velvet-covered sofa from sofa.com, with customized key elements, like the kitchen. The refrigerator is from Fisher & Paykel, and the tiles are from Topps Tiles.
In the farmhouse architect Lucy Marston built for her family in Suffolk, England, she balanced off-the-shelf pieces, such as a velvet-covered sofa from sofa.com, with customized key elements, like the kitchen. The refrigerator is from Fisher & Paykel, and the tiles are from Topps Tiles.
1º and 2º Floor
1º and 2º Floor
3º and 4º floor
3º and 4º floor
Retroactive II 1964 – Oil and silk-screen ink print on canvas 213.4 x 152.4 cm
Retroactive II 1964 – Oil and silk-screen ink print on canvas 213.4 x 152.4 cm
Islesboro Ferry Slip, 1975, 198 x 213.4 cm, Art © Alex Katz/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY.
Islesboro Ferry Slip, 1975, 198 x 213.4 cm, Art © Alex Katz/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY.
This phenomenal site offers 270º views acrosse the Andes
This phenomenal site offers 270º views acrosse the Andes
Corrugated metal siding bent 90º around the corner, an innovative product called Formflow C90
Corrugated metal siding bent 90º around the corner, an innovative product called Formflow C90
Visitors enjoy a 360º panorama at the tower's peak.
Visitors enjoy a 360º panorama at the tower's peak.
The façades rotated 45º with respect to the orthogonal limits of the plot.
The façades rotated 45º with respect to the orthogonal limits of the plot.
The 45º furniture collection by Blu Bathworks is handcrafted with quality and sustainable materials with the lowest formaldehyde emissions in the world.
The 45º furniture collection by Blu Bathworks is handcrafted with quality and sustainable materials with the lowest formaldehyde emissions in the world.
Black Hat (Bettina), 2010, Oil on linen, 152.4 x 213.4 cm, Private Collection, London, © Alex Katz/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY, Image courtesy Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris - Salzburg.
Black Hat (Bettina), 2010, Oil on linen, 152.4 x 213.4 cm, Private Collection, London, © Alex Katz/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY, Image courtesy Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris - Salzburg.
Enjoy fresh mountain air and get a bird’s eye view of the Himalayas at Shakti 360º Leti – four private stone, glass and wood cabins high on the peaks of the India-Nepal border.
Enjoy fresh mountain air and get a bird’s eye view of the Himalayas at Shakti 360º Leti – four private stone, glass and wood cabins high on the peaks of the India-Nepal border.
Lee Bontecou, American, born 1931, Detail of Untitled. 1980-1998, Welded steel, porcelain, wire mesh, canvas, and wire. 213.4 x 243.8 x 182.9 cm, The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Gift of Philip Johnson (by exchange) and the Nina and Gordon Bunshaft Bequest Fund, © 2010 Lee Bontecou.
Lee Bontecou, American, born 1931, Detail of Untitled. 1980-1998, Welded steel, porcelain, wire mesh, canvas, and wire. 213.4 x 243.8 x 182.9 cm, The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Gift of Philip Johnson (by exchange) and the Nina and Gordon Bunshaft Bequest Fund, © 2010 Lee Bontecou.
Enjoy fresh mountain air and get a bird’s eye view of the Himalayas at Shakti 360º Leti – four private stone, glass and wood cabins high on the peaks of the India-Nepal border.
Enjoy fresh mountain air and get a bird’s eye view of the Himalayas at Shakti 360º Leti – four private stone, glass and wood cabins high on the peaks of the India-Nepal border.
Faro is a minimalist table lamp created by Valencia-based designer LaSelva. It is divided in two parts, the base and the lampshade without the use of any hardware. The cylindrical marble base has a magnet at the top, surrounded with a thin felt, to allow the shade to stay in the desired position. The lamp shade can rotate 360º in horizontal and 45º in vertical keeping the base in the same spot. The spherical shape of the shade makes it possible for it to pivot from the base adopting various positions. The shade is closed with a translucent polypropylene. The metal shade finishes include black matte, black chrome, and antique brass.
Faro is a minimalist table lamp created by Valencia-based designer LaSelva. It is divided in two parts, the base and the lampshade without the use of any hardware. The cylindrical marble base has a magnet at the top, surrounded with a thin felt, to allow the shade to stay in the desired position. The lamp shade can rotate 360º in horizontal and 45º in vertical keeping the base in the same spot. The spherical shape of the shade makes it possible for it to pivot from the base adopting various positions. The shade is closed with a translucent polypropylene. The metal shade finishes include black matte, black chrome, and antique brass.
Shakti 360º Leti sits at an altitude of 8,000 feet and looks out to the snow-capped peaks of the Himalayas. To get to the retreat, you have to follow a trail that leads you to an isolated, rugged spot with welcoming structures that combine traditional building techniques with modern design.
Shakti 360º Leti sits at an altitude of 8,000 feet and looks out to the snow-capped peaks of the Himalayas. To get to the retreat, you have to follow a trail that leads you to an isolated, rugged spot with welcoming structures that combine traditional building techniques with modern design.
The bespoke cabinetry we designed uses a black detail rail which ties together the shelves, pendant lighting and bar stools. We also designed a unique finger-pull in the cabinet face which obfuscates the need for attached pulls/ knobs, and means any drawer can be opened from the the top or underside. When drawers and cabinets are closed a 45º cut allows the finger pull to complete a seamless right angle continuation around corners, matching the detail rail above it.
The bespoke cabinetry we designed uses a black detail rail which ties together the shelves, pendant lighting and bar stools. We also designed a unique finger-pull in the cabinet face which obfuscates the need for attached pulls/ knobs, and means any drawer can be opened from the the top or underside. When drawers and cabinets are closed a 45º cut allows the finger pull to complete a seamless right angle continuation around corners, matching the detail rail above it.
The Flatiron 2.1 Amplified Lifestyle Speaker.
Luxurious handcrafted materials along with best-in-class European audio components combine to create a big room audio listening experience unlike any other. Designed for large spaces, the main speaker drivers of the top cabinet are angled at a perfect 120º providing optimal sound dispersion and the bottom cabinet features a dedicated subwoofer to fill out the bass. All powered by a prodigious 400 watts of low distortion amplification… let the party begin!
The Flatiron 2.1 Amplified Lifestyle Speaker. Luxurious handcrafted materials along with best-in-class European audio components combine to create a big room audio listening experience unlike any other. Designed for large spaces, the main speaker drivers of the top cabinet are angled at a perfect 120º providing optimal sound dispersion and the bottom cabinet features a dedicated subwoofer to fill out the bass. All powered by a prodigious 400 watts of low distortion amplification… let the party begin!
Janus is a minimal table lamp created by Brooklyn-based designers Trueing. Janus, one of Saturn’s outermost rings, as well as the two-faced, coin-gracing Roman deity of transitions, is the eponym and inspiration for Trueing’s newest table lamp. With an adjustable shade of dichroic glass at its center, the lamp’s luminous brass ring shines inwards to create a colorful, aurora-like effect. Trueing designed the lamp in the spirit of planetary movement and deep space, focusing on their desire to create a transitional object that evolves with its environment. To achieve this experience, Trueing equipped the lamp with a shade of color-changing dichroic glass positioned at the center of a halo of dimmable LEDs. A small knob at its side allows the user to rotate the shade 360º, casting different colors of light as it rotates. When Janus is turned off, the dichroic qualities render the glass as mirrored, colored, or transparent depending on the ambient light.
Janus is a minimal table lamp created by Brooklyn-based designers Trueing. Janus, one of Saturn’s outermost rings, as well as the two-faced, coin-gracing Roman deity of transitions, is the eponym and inspiration for Trueing’s newest table lamp. With an adjustable shade of dichroic glass at its center, the lamp’s luminous brass ring shines inwards to create a colorful, aurora-like effect. Trueing designed the lamp in the spirit of planetary movement and deep space, focusing on their desire to create a transitional object that evolves with its environment. To achieve this experience, Trueing equipped the lamp with a shade of color-changing dichroic glass positioned at the center of a halo of dimmable LEDs. A small knob at its side allows the user to rotate the shade 360º, casting different colors of light as it rotates. When Janus is turned off, the dichroic qualities render the glass as mirrored, colored, or transparent depending on the ambient light.
Untamed. Raw. “The Last Frontier.” Alaska is synonymous with wild beauty and its landscapes demand respect. Here, simple comforts feel like luxuries. The Sheldon Chalet sits on a lonely outcropping, a 5-acre [20,000-square-meter] nunatak in the Don Sheldon Amphitheater of Denali’s Ruth Glacier. As one of the most remote guest-houses in the world—accessible only by bush plane, or on foot by the very bravest of mountaineers willing to risk their lives—the chalet offers views and an experience like no other. Just south of the chalet, on the same outcropping, is the Historic Mountain House, a small hut built in 1966. It’s perched at an elevation of 6,000 feet [1,830 meters], a short distance from the summit of Denali, in the middle of the 6-million-acre [24,280-square-kilometer] park. Because of this extreme setting, the original owner, Roberta Sheldon, used to ask guests if they were “physically fit and mentally flexible” before they made the journey to the hut. Roberta and her husband, Don Sheldon, a pioneering bush pilot, originally acquired the land in the 1950s as part of the Homestead Act. The couple built the Historic Mountain House and also planned to build a vacation destination on the property, but were unable to realize the dream before Don passed away in 1975. When the couple’s children acquired the hut in 2014, they discovered the original 1968 plans for the chalet and, using those plans as a guide, they were able to realize their parents’ dream. With remoteness and accessibility a consideration, all the materials for the chalet and sauna had to be flown in by plane or hung by a sling and helicoptered in. A stunning accomplishment, the five-bedroom chalet and cedar-lined sauna are a well-earned place to watch a solar storm, witnessing the purples, blues, and greens of the aurora with the naked eye. Located 63º north of the equator, the chalet is designed to endure 100ºF [56ºC] temperature swings, hurricane-force winds, and the incredibly brutal Alaskan climate.
Untamed. Raw. “The Last Frontier.” Alaska is synonymous with wild beauty and its landscapes demand respect. Here, simple comforts feel like luxuries. The Sheldon Chalet sits on a lonely outcropping, a 5-acre [20,000-square-meter] nunatak in the Don Sheldon Amphitheater of Denali’s Ruth Glacier. As one of the most remote guest-houses in the world—accessible only by bush plane, or on foot by the very bravest of mountaineers willing to risk their lives—the chalet offers views and an experience like no other. Just south of the chalet, on the same outcropping, is the Historic Mountain House, a small hut built in 1966. It’s perched at an elevation of 6,000 feet [1,830 meters], a short distance from the summit of Denali, in the middle of the 6-million-acre [24,280-square-kilometer] park. Because of this extreme setting, the original owner, Roberta Sheldon, used to ask guests if they were “physically fit and mentally flexible” before they made the journey to the hut. Roberta and her husband, Don Sheldon, a pioneering bush pilot, originally acquired the land in the 1950s as part of the Homestead Act. The couple built the Historic Mountain House and also planned to build a vacation destination on the property, but were unable to realize the dream before Don passed away in 1975. When the couple’s children acquired the hut in 2014, they discovered the original 1968 plans for the chalet and, using those plans as a guide, they were able to realize their parents’ dream. With remoteness and accessibility a consideration, all the materials for the chalet and sauna had to be flown in by plane or hung by a sling and helicoptered in. A stunning accomplishment, the five-bedroom chalet and cedar-lined sauna are a well-earned place to watch a solar storm, witnessing the purples, blues, and greens of the aurora with the naked eye. Located 63º north of the equator, the chalet is designed to endure 100ºF [56ºC] temperature swings, hurricane-force winds, and the incredibly brutal Alaskan climate.