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Yasajiro Gravity Speedbike, two-wheeled downhill racers with no pedals or chains by Tange
(via castlelake)

Shelter of Nostalgia by Worapong Manupipatpong
(via alwaysinstudio)

Magistral Cabinet by Sebastian Errazuriz studio
Magistral Cabinet incorporates an exterior layer of 80,000 sharpened wood dowels, placed by hand one at a time until the cabinet is ready to symbolically protect the belongings of its owner. A set of concealed doors slides open to reveal its inner mechanisms and each of its many compartments.
The obsessive and labor-intensive process required a team of 12 woodworkers, who spent a total of six weeks individually hammering each skewer into the previously carved wooden structure.

The pictures of still-life photographer Marcel Christ are actually not so very still. Everything moves, jumps, flies, like in a memorable one-frame movie
2dots design spotlight : Tofu stationery set by Pana Objects
(Source: airows)
(Source: airows)

Aarvli Resort in Goa - India
London and Âumbai-based practice Serie Architects have broken ground on the ‘aarvli resort’ in goa along the western coast of India. Positioned on top of a steep cliff, this fort-like structure is capped with a rooftop landscape overlooking the arabian sea to the west and mochemad khadi estuary to the north.
(Source: theblackworkshop, via castlelake)

Jörg Koch - Sarandschasch house, Sent 2006. (C) Roger Frei.

Abbotsford Renovation by CHAN Architecture
Traditional in the front, contemporary in the back. Call it the hipster’s mullet if you will. More fantastic architecture from Australia.

BeoPlay A9 Speaker, by Bang & Olufsen

City Sunday by Minus Tio
A great wall mounted wire magazine rack designed to look like a cityscape. Available in many colors. Additionally they have a floor standing version called “In The Neighbourhood” which could also be perfect for vinyl storage.

Mid-City Modern
The decidedly nontraditional structure includes a front wall that opens the living room onto the front yard—and to the rest of the neighborhood, which has enthusiastically welcomed the house and its owner. Photo by: Mark Steinmetz