Precedent Research

Library Research

Kate James

FabBrick

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FabBRICK was born from carefully repurposed fabrics, reinvented to become a noble material, both soft to the touch and visually striking. This material is distinguished by its deep texture, vibrant colors, and its ability to tell a unique story.

Glyph: Plastic Waste Material Play Furniture

Joselyn McDonald

“Designed to inspire spontaneous behaviour, GLYPH encourages playfulness and increases the bonds between users of all age groups through involvement, inclusion and interaction”

Conceived as an easy-to-apply system of play furniture to activate empty lots, the monolithic elements are light and portable, and can be arranged in multiple ways to build a colourful and unexpected open-air playground.

Learn more: https://thenewraw.org/GLYPH

Electronics accessory brand Casetify has launched a series of public art installations in five cities around the world using recycled phone cases as the key material.

These installations form part of the brand's 2024 Earth Month campaign Journey to Re/Birth, which invited local artists from the US, South Korea, China, Australia, and Thailand to create art and design pieces made out of discarded phone cases collected by the brand's Re/Casetify upcycling program.

"All of these are part of the brand's ongoing efforts to make sure the end of any phone case is the beginning of a new one in all possible ways," said Casetify.

Learn more here: https://www.dezeen.com/2024/05/15/casetify-global-installations-recycled-phone-cases/

As part of Dubai Design Week, British designer Ross Lovegrove has unveiled the first completed project from Deond, the design practice he founded with creative director Ila Colombo after moving to the United Arab Emirates.

The Enfold pavilion is clad in 945 sheets of recycled cardboard, hand-folded into trapezoidal modules that overlap across its circular timber frame.

Learn more here: https://www.dezeen.com/2024/11/08/deond-enfold-pavilion-dubai-design-week/

Mosstika: Flora Interventions

Kate James

Mosstika Urban Greenery is a NYC based collective of eco-minded street artists, using gorilla tactics to evoke the call of man back to nature. In her art, eco-minded, NY-based installation artist Edina Tokodi, explores the diversity and intricate connections between nature and the inorganic world created by man. Her site-specific installations are inspired by Japanese Zen gardens and informed by the space’s environs, whether organic or man-made. Often sheathed in steel, glass, pavement and stone, the installations provide an unavoidable contrast to their surroundings. It is within this contrasting atmosphere, that her installations invite interaction, thus reclaiming the human bond with nature.

More information here: http://www.mosstika.com/about