Plastiquarium is recycled plastic art by artist David Edgar. Make from used detergent bottles and other recycled plastics, Plastiquarium is a collection of strange marine creatures.
Champion Papers produced this colourful packaging designs in 1968 to promote their Imagination line papers. The packaging suggest that an eye-catching label can virtually invite a customer to stop looking around and pick up your product.
This Container Mall proposed by LOT-EK back in 2003 was designed to take advantage of the inherent intelligence of standardized shipping containers to configure vertical malls that could be erected in left over empty lots throughout the city.
Kenneth Cobonpue's approach for Z bar is a framework sculpture that fuses utility with beauty. Bamboo branches and steel are hand-tied with rattan to form a cocoon-like structure that morphs into the furniture in the bar.
Spark Lamp is not just another flashy lamp. It is equipped with a 1 RGB LED light and fitted with a Wi-Fi system that allows you to monitor your energy usage. By designer Beverly Ng.
GreenPIX- Zero Energy Media Wall Featuring the largest color LED display worldwide and the first photovoltaic system integrated into a glass curtain wall in China
Kengo Kuma's bamboo Wall in the countryside near Beijing is breathtaking. It is a building that listens to the land around it, and this is the source of its beauty.
The Cloud is designed by Monica Förster. Cloud is the portable room for meeting, resting and concentrating. A room easy to transport from place to place.
A limited edition lamp designed by Marcus Tremonto, the Getty Lamp is designed to be hung on the wall. It features a single band of material swirled around itself into a coil.
Bamboo Light System was designed based on the nature of bamboo. Each part of the lamp is flexible enough to join with other, the system is able to form unlimited designs. By Pablo Reinoso.
Mark Langan creatively transformed the everyday material into something other than its original intended purpose…aesthetically beautiful three-dimensional art.
Designed by Marcio Kogan Architects, the building is free of detailing, the raw concrete is visible throughout, complete with construction workers' chalk markings.