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The British menswear label Smithfield collaborates with furniture designer Peter Masters to create a vibrant, 100% recycled interior for their new Manchester shop. This dynamic space repurposes mailing tubes and shipping boxes into striking wall coverings, light fixtures, hanging sculptures, and clothing displays. Once a warehouse and now the headquarters of the Disney Store, the playful design features a meeting space with walls inspired by toy building blocks, allowing for interactive seating transformation. Explore the intersection of design, sustainability, and fashion through deconstruction.
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Deconstruction • buildings, interiors and spaces
The British menswear label Smithfield recently teamed up with furniture designer Peter Masters to create an eclectic and 100% recycled interior for their new Manchester shop. The dynamic space uses mailing tubes and shipping boxes as elements of digital-age styling, recycling them into incredible wall coverings, light fixtures, hanging sculptures, and clothing displays.
Once a gigantic warehouse, this vast interior is now home to the headquarters of the Disney Store designed by Clive Wilkinson. Perhaps the most playful and interactive part of the design is the meeting space shown above. Inspired by toy building blocks as well as the exterior brick of the building, the walls can be deconstructed and turned into seating.
Moorehead & Moorehead's design explored the deconstruction of a standard event tent through a series of cuts and folds. The tent’s interior was designed by New York architects Aranda\Lasch.
Frank Gehry / Guggenheim Bilbao • http:
Even more things to deconstruct... Deconstruction in ads Deconstruction in fashion Garcons, “Like Boys” by Rei Kawakubo