Yang Sofa is sofa that allows you to play with. It can be interlocked to form a sofa or a sectional. You can create a range of different groupings using up to four left or right arm sofas. Designer Francois Bauchet created this brilliant Yang sofa for Ligne Roset. – Found via – Teejay5



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King of Siam is a combination of two shelfing units by moebler, , a new Berlin based design/art group. I don’t know where the designer of this bookshelve was thinking when she designed it, but in the end he created a really strange piece of furniture, but some of you might like crazy ideas like this one. I’m sure that with a bookshelve like this you can arrange your books and souvenirs in a lot of creative ways. – Via – designspotter

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Dottings Design decided to combine fringes and light and create this beautiful chandelier that has an exquisitely old look, that was exposed at Vienna Design Weeks between 3 Oct and 21 Oct 2007. This chandelier is a great example of how you can use inspiration from old things to create beautiful new stuff. – Via – Designbuzz

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In these days people seem to have more places to hold the CDs and DVDs than books. For those here is a beautiful piece of furniture that allows you to store your digital data in an original way. The Vienna CD furniture joins two seemingly incomparative styles: Baroque and High-tech. In a traditionally handmade, golden baroque frame the Austrian designer f maurer puts a metallic structure, in which exactly 288 CDs can be arranged.
Through a series of bore holes in the structure the vertical inox-bars can be positioned in optional distances, so that the CD-collection can be grouped individually. The arrangement itself looks like a graphic art at the level of the supposed painting, whereas the frame seems to fly in a small distance from the wall. You can get this piece of furniture from here.

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An 11-story building with 9 duplex residential condominium apartments ranging from 1,950sqft to a 3,180sqft penthouse with three terraces designed by Shigeru Ban, an architect born in Tokyo and noted for his work with paper products, is planned for 524 West 19th Street in Chelsea. The Metal Shutter Houses have walls that lift up completely out of the way. The facade motorized perforated metal shutters serve as light-modulating privacy screen at the outer edge of each residence’s terrace adjacent to the double-height living rooms.

This subtle “removable skin” echoes the neighboring gallery after-hours shutters, subtly contextualizing the building within its site. The building can literally close down, becoming a uniform minimal cube, or it can open completely (as well as virtually unlimited permutations between). South of the terrace, twenty foot tall, upwardly pivoting glass windows open completely, thus blurring the boundary between the inside and outside – the double height living room and terrace become one. Similarly, a series of interior sliding glass doors create an open “universal floor” in each of the duplex houses – one vast and uninterrupted expanse which transitions seamlessly from inside to outside, or partition the space into private areas. Occupancy is expected in late 2008, and there is not info about price. – Via – Nytimes

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