article thumbnail

Melbourne’s Design A Space to shut up shop after 17 years

Inside Retail

Founded by husband and wife team Chris and Bec Lutz in 2006, Design A Space rents physical floor space to independent brands hoping to showcase their goods to a metropolitan customer base. The venture grew to three locations across the Melbourne CBD, Fitzroy, and Windsor, and has stocked goods from more than 170 small businesses.

Space 130
article thumbnail

Fabric arches divide Jonathan Simkhai store in SoHo by Aruliden

Dezeen

Together with the graphic cutouts, this creates a natural flow to the back area where more products, seating and changing rooms are located, The archways, furniture and podiums are based on the cut-out shapes of Jonathan Simkhai's clothing. "Clothing and products break the cadence of the fabric arches," said Kreider.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Leading the way to global dominance!

Design Middleeast

I have been with Sedar since 2006, and since then embarked on various ventures within the company, leading processes such as manufacturing, operations, and strategic planning in addition to leading design innovations. We will transform their furniture ensuring a seamless design flow in their spaces.”

article thumbnail

Designing the Human Experience: Office Design

Onyx

One way is to locate working areas in relation to each other so noise producing settings are away from private concentration zones. degrees Fahrenheit, according to a 2006 study by the Helsinki University of Technology. The office layout should allow ventilation flow through and around furniture. degrees and 71.6

Design 56
article thumbnail

Transforming Workspaces: Exploring the Power of Commercial Office Interior Design

Greater Group

Designs for an organisation that values transparency and free-flowing communication, for instance, might have less walls between departments and more open spaces. 2006, but the Australian government recommended level for general work areas is 160 lux. The Australian standard for lighting can be found in AS/NZS 1680.1:2006,