Interiors
WOW Sendai by Upsetters Architects
Upsetters Architects of Japan have completed the interiors for the new offices of visual design studio WOW, located in Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture, Japan. More about WOW Sendai by Upsetters Architects
Upsetters Architects of Japan have completed the interiors for the new offices of visual design studio WOW, located in Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture, Japan. More about WOW Sendai by Upsetters Architects
Stuttgart practice Ippolito Fleitz Group have completed the interiors for a fast-food chicken restaurant in Munich, Germany. More about Wienerwald restaurant by Ippolito Fleitz Group
This boutique in Seoul was designed by Korean firm Betwin Space Design to showcase crocodile-skin handbags. More about Kwanpen Boutique by Betwin Space Design
This installation by Italian architect Francesco Moncada for the Wrong Weather store in Porto, Portugal, features wooden furniture clustered together in different formations. More about Algebraic Variations at Wrong Weather by Francesco Moncada
Customers can play their own music inside booths at this pizza restaurant in Richmond, UK, designed by Ab Rogers of London. More about Living Lab by Ab Rogers for Pizza Express
Melbourne practice March Studio have trapped 4500 cardboard boxes behind netting in this store for Australian skincare brand Aesop. More about Aesop at Merci by March Studio
London designer Simon Heijdens has applied a special film to windows at the Art Institute Chicago that creates constantly-changing shadows in response to weather conditions outside. More about Shade by Simon Heijdens
Japanese architect Jo Nagasaka of Schemata Architecture Office used materials reclaimed from a demolished house for the interior of this Tokyo shop for Australian skincare brand Aesop. More about Aesop Aoyama by Schemata Architecture Office
The Groninger Museum in the Netherlands has re-opened following a renovation including areas designed by Studio Job, Maarten Baas and Jaime Hayón. More about Groninger Museum renovation by Studio Job, Maarten Baas and Jaime Hayón
Here are some photos of Studioilse's latest project, a five-storey apartment building in Hong Kong. More about TwoTwoSix Hollywood Road by Studioilse
French architects RDAI have completed this new Paris boutique for fashion brand Hermès inside a 1930s swimming pool building. More about Hermès Rive Gauche by RDAI
Japanese architects StudioGreenBlue have inserted concrete bars behind the glazed wall in this family home in Fukaya, Saitama Prefecture, Japan. More about House with Concrete Louvers by StudioGreenBlue
This bar in Shanghai by 3Gatti Architecture Studio has an undulating cave-like form created by apertures cut into fins along its length. More about Zebar by 3Gatti Architecture Studio
Belgian studio Atelier Tom Vanhee opened this apartment in a listed Bruges building to the attic above, then opened the attic to the sky. More about Renovation Bruges by Atelier Tom Vanhee
Italian studio Antonio Ravalli Architetti have converted an old factory in Migliarino, Italy, into a youth hostel where guests can stay in these tall fabric-covered pods. More about MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti
Italian studio Antonio Ravalli Architetti have transformed the ground floor of a warehouse in Verona, Italy, into a showroom featuring gathered translucent curtains hanging from the ceiling. More about Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli Architetti
Industrial designer Konstantin Grcic's installed seats made of netting suspended from a metal structure at Design Miami/ last week. More about Netscape by Konstantin Grcic at Design Miami/
London firm Universal Design Studio have completed the interior of a shop on London's New Bond Street for fashion brand Mulberry. More about Mulberry New Bond Street store by Universal Design Studio
This narrow staircase with alternating steps is one of a pair installed by French studio MAAJ Architectes in a Parisian apartment. More about Paris apartment by MAAJ Architectes
Concertinaed paper-like ribbons swoop through an exhibition about performance art and movement designed by London firm Amanda Levete Architects at the Hayward Gallery in London. More about Move: Choreographing You exhibition design by Amanda Levete Architects