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Open Design Language in Open-Kitchen Restaurants

ArchDaily

The low-skilled cooking techniques and apparatus employed at branded fast-food restaurants, for example, are presented in full visibility to waiting customers. Compare that to more upmarket establishments that keep the cacophony of a commercial kitchen hidden from view during service, and you start to wonder what else they might be hiding.

Technique 271
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Market Makeovers: How Barcelona’s Public Food Markets Are Evolving With the City

Architizer

Barcelona’s traditional markets are celebrated for their distinctive cast iron designs, a construction technique that emerged during industrialization and a renewed focus on urban planning and city hygiene. A variety of food stalls, shops, halls, and restaurants foster commercial activity and social interaction.

Cities 116
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Prada designing lunar spacesuits for NASA moon mission

Deezen

Fashion house Prada has teamed up with commercial space company Axiom Space to create lunar spacesuits for NASA 's Artemis III mission, which will be the first crewed moon landing since 1972. Artemis III will also be the first mission to place a woman on the moon.

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Mizzi Studio Designs 9 Royal Parks Kiosks Using Sustainable Materials and Traditional Craft Techniques

Architizer

Their design responds to the Grade I-listed landscape, with sustainable materials and traditional craft techniques creating simple, functional forms. Architizer: What inspired the initial concept for your design? Were any parts of the project dramatically altered from conception to construction, and if so, why? Not really.

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Open-kitchen restaurants that put transparency on the menu | News | Architonic

Architonic

The low-skilled cooking techniques and apparatus employed at branded fast-food restaurants, for example, are presented in full visibility to waiting customers. Compare that to more upmarket establishments that keep the cacophony of a commercial kitchen hidden from view during service, and you start to wonder what else they might be hiding.

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Are We Thinking About 3D-Printed Housing All Wrong?

Dwell

An exciting new technology, it seemed, had come to the rescue as a solution to the affordable housing crises plaguing the 21st century (though the first 3D-printed home was built in 1939, the concept gained traction in 1995). Concept art for a 3D-printed prototype in Flint, Michigan.

Housing 84
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Living Places Copenhagen demonstrates how homes can be built with lower CO2 footprint

Deezen

Promotion: window manufacturer Velux has published a case study highlighting the principles and impact of its experimental, low-carbon housing concept built in Copenhagen. The project uses existing technologies and materials to show that low-carbon housing with a high-quality indoor climate can be scalable, affordable and commercially viable.

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