Wednesday 1 May 2024 - Monocle Minute | Monocle

Wednesday. 1/5/2024

The Monocle Minute
On Design

Image: Adam Štěch

Lens flair

We spring into action for this week’s dispatch, lacing up our running shoes to visit a new sports park on Istanbul’s waterfront, and check out a game-changing museum rebrand in Switzerland. We also discover how a New York-based studio reworked a former meat market into a picture-perfect camera shop. First, our design correspondent Stella Roos speaks to a Czech architect documenting modernism’s wonders, including Charlotte Perriand’s Méribel residence (pictured).

Opinion / Stella Roos

All in the details

What is the difference between an architect and a designer? The answer might seem obvious: the former focuses on buildings and the latter on objects. But this distinction is a recent invention. Czech architect Adam Stech, co-founder of the Okolo creative collective, tells me that many 20th-century practitioners would have found the question irrelevant. “The two disciplines are interrelated,” he says. “Architecture is the design of the environment that we live in.”

Stech is a full-time architecture hunter. Armed with a camera and a tripod, he crisscrosses the globe documenting mid-century houses. He then shares his discoveries with his 170,000 social-media followers, puts on exhibitions and writes articles about them. Through a combination of charm, scrupulous organisation and ringing doorbells, Stech has been able to access many previously unphotographed private homes. His camera zooms in on modernism’s small-scale delights: tiles, lights, fireplaces, floors, hatches and handrails.

Aside from feeding his insatiable appetite for archi-tourism, Stech’s mission is to showcase 20th-century architecture’s close attention to detail. He wishes that the remit of today’s architects would encompass everything from “the spoon to the skyscraper”, a reference to the dictum of Milan’s modernists. The global movement’s captivating architectural quirks, such as Gunnar Asplund’s built-in benches or Gio Ponti’s sculptural door handles, were made possible by the fact that it placed equal importance on all objects that make up our lived environment.

Many of Okolo’s followers are professionals who reference Stech’s photos for projects that they are working on. Some have also told me that they would pay good money for a book. “I want to create the world’s largest archive of modernist architecture photographed by a single person,” says Stech. He is already well on his way – and the industry is all the better for it.

Stella Roos is Monocle’s design correspondent. For more news and analysis, subscribe today.

The Project / Leica shop, USA

Market value

Think of Manhattan’s Meatpacking District today and you’ll picture its glitzy office blocks or the High Line urban parkway. But the area’s name is a reminder that it was once an important artery for moving goods around the city. Camera manufacturer Leica’s flagship shop and gallery, located in a 1950s-era meat market, pays homage to that history. New York-based Format Architecture Office has restored and reinvented the building with a screen-like brickwork façade that references the exquisite masonry hidden away in some of the district’s older nooks.

Image: Lieca / Format
Image: Lieca / Format
Image: Lieca / Format

“Many buildings were upscaled and maximised but this one was overlooked,” says Andrew McGee, Format Architecture Office’s co-founder and principal architect. “We wanted to maintain the small scale of the structure but make it punch above its weight.” The architects preserved the market’s original timber-framed ceiling but created a textural façade to allow light through the bricks. “A lot of craft and innovation goes into Leica products,” says McGee, who tells Monocle that this principle was also crucial to the shop’s design. “It’s both old school and new school – a good balance.”
leica-camera.com; format.nyc

Design News / Golden Horn Sports Park, Turkey

Sporting chance

The Golden Horn is an inlet of the Bosphorus on Istanbul’s waterfront. For years it lay derelict, cut off by the busy road that runs alongside it. Now, however, with the opening of the Golden Horn Sports Park, it has become a new hub for the city’s social and sporting scenes. “Before this, you couldn’t walk next to the water,” says Renay Onur, general manager of the city’s sports facilities. “The idea was to convert the Golden Horn into a place where Istanbullus can play sports and spend recreational time in an uninterrupted way.”

Image: Egemen Karakaya
Image: Egemen Karakaya

The park, designed by husband-and-wife team Ervin and Banu Garip, covers an area that is the size of four football pitches and incorporates sports fields, walkways, grassland and facilities for Istanbul’s rowing, canoeing and sailing federations. The park’s design nods to the Golden Horn’s recent history as an industrial hub, with a skate park directly beneath a train bridge. The project shows how a smartly designed urban landscape can enhance a city’s visual appeal while encouraging its residents to be more active. Eleven more waterfront parks are now planned for other unloved parts of Istanbul’s waterfront.

The Golden Horn Sports Park won the ‘Best Urban Intervention’ prize in the 2024 Monocle Design Awards. Read about all of the winners in the May issue of Monocle.

Words with... / Amos Goldreich, UK

Plans of action

When London-based architect Amos Goldreich discovered thousands of photos, paintings, illustrations and designs for private residences and custom furniture created by his parents, architects Tamar de Shalit and Arthur Goldreich, he was faced with a question: how to preserve it all? He decided to put some of the chairs, tables and objects into production. Last month he launched Tamart, a furniture brand that reimagines his parents’ designs using British timber. We deemed the collection, which brims with personal and historical connections, worthy of a Monocle Design Award. Here, Goldreich tells us more about the brand.

Why did you decide to tell your parents’ stories through furniture?
The first stage was assessing what the archive held. Initially, I was overwhelmed by the sheer magnitude of it. Architect friends helped me to research and catalogue the archive, which took several years. Through that process, I realised that my parents had designed all of the furniture that went into their projects. They never used anything that was mass-produced.

How has the furniture for Tamart evolved from your parents’ original designs?
I intended to stay true to their designs at the outset – I felt that it was my duty to my parents. But it’s obvious that things have changed since the 1950s and 1960s. People’s dimensions are different, which presents an opportunity to refine the designs. My studio has put a stamp on everything from a production and sustainability point of view. We decided not to use foam for upholstery, for instance. Instead, we use all-natural materials such as coconut fibre and wool.

What meaning do you hope that people will find in your collection?
It’s nice that this furniture is related to families – to my life story and my parents. Along with an appreciation of good design and craftsmanship, I hope that this idea will resonate with new owners. I want to change people’s lives in a positive manner, whether that’s through creating furniture or designing homes and spaces.

For more from Goldreich – and other winners of the 2024 Monocle Design Awards – tune in to the latest episode of ‘Monocle on Design’.

Illustration: Anje Jager

From The Archive / Side 1 cabinet, Japan

Making waves

This wiggly cabinet is one of the earliest examples of postmodern furniture design. During modernism’s late-1960s heyday, Japanese designer Shiro Kuramata started experimenting in his Tokyo studio with what he called “furniture in irregular forms”. There is certainly no functional reason for a chest of drawers to be S-shaped but the designer must have wondered: why not?

Kuramata first presented the Side 1 cabinet in 1970 and quickly became an international success, forming a special relationship with the Italian design community. When Ettore Sottsass founded the Memphis collective in 1981, Kuramata was invited to join. Five years later, Cappellini put his wavy cabinets into production. They remain in the furniture company’s catalogue with a price north of €25,000. As a movement, postmodernism might be past its prime but, as the Side 1’s enduring appeal shows, it taught us that furniture doesn’t always have to be so square.

Award winner / Fritz Hansen PK4, Denmark

Knowing the ropes

The PK4 Lounge Chair, known for its minimalism and sleek architectural form, looks as fresh today as it did when Poul Kjaerholm designed it in 1952. Now the chair is elegantly crafted by Fritz Hansen with a stainless-steel frame, as well as a seat and back made from durable flag-halyard rope. Its angular form showcases Kjaerholm’s distinctive style, whose timeless, clean lines transcend passing fads – making it perfect for any homeowner looking for an heirloom piece.

The PK4 by Fritz Hansen was named as the ‘Best Archival Revival’ in the 2024 Monocle Design Awards. For more winners, pick up a copy of our May issue, which is available now online and on newsstands.

Image: Swiss Museum of Games

In The Picture / Musée Suisse du Jeu, Switzerland

All to play for

The Musée Suisse du Jeu has been showcasing the history of games in the country since 1987. Its collection spans everything from marbles, chess pawns, cards and board games to consoles, controllers and joysticks. When Selim Krichane became the museum’s director in 2023, he ushered in a new era for the institution with a game-changing (pun intended) rebrand in partnership with Lausanne-based design studio Hymn. The new branding features round-edged tokens that display geometric shapes and the museum’s monogram in a typeface created by Studio Feixen. The tokens line up both horizontally and vertically, meaning that the colours and letters can be arranged in any way.

“Our mission was to create an identity that evoked the universe of games without relying on a single source for inspiration,” says Alexandre Henriques, Hymn’s founder and creative director. “Our proposal needed to be timeless, simple and easily understood by a diverse audience of all ages.” And, of course, it had to be fun. Talk about a playful rebrand.
museedujeu.ch; hymn.design

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