060
Below, from left
Sites such as abandoned power stations have been repurposed as homes, studios and bars. Artist Kick Stals presented powerful illustrations against consumerism and waste
BRIEF ENCOUNTERS
Filled with earnest investigations into eco materials and processes, Dutch Design Week 2022 shows how to raise the level of debate, not just in design communities but also the wider cultural agenda. Veronica Simpson reports
NOBODY DOES industrial chic quite like Eindhoven. I knew this to be true long before I actually visited this reinvented Dutch ‘company town’. A town made by electronics giant Philips in the 20th century, and then almost broken by them in the 1980s when they announced thousands of redundancies, having relocated its HQ to Amsterdam and manufacturing elsewhere. But what they left behind – crucially – was a population of skilled engineers, designers and electricians. With minimal budgets but lashings of ingenuity, they have reclaimed and repurposed the abandoned factories and laboratories as homes, studios, hotels, bars, restaurants and workshops. And let’s not forget the design colleges: the company’s rich research and education DNA is still visible in numerous design schools, the most remarkable of them being Design Academy Eindhoven (DAE). It is DAE’s activities that form the cornerstone of the annual autumn Dutch Design Week (DDW), one of the oldest and most visited design festivals in Europe, with over 370,000 people typically turning up to poke among the weird, wonderful and innovative exhibits from the school’s graduates and alumni as well as the wider Dutch design community. DAE has long been a hotbed of multi- disciplinarity, fusing design with science, tech and art. Its alumni include some of the most provocative and pioneering designers of the last
few decades, such as conceptual art/design maestro Maarten Baas, plastic recycling pioneer Dave Hakkens, Kiki van Ejk (of Kiki & Joost, designers for everyone from Hermes to Haagen-Dazs) and wacky furniture designer Marcel Wanders.
But the moment for wacky furniture or wasteful manufacturing is well and truly past. So what do we find inside the repurposed laboratories and workshops at DDW 2022? Fortunately, the sustainable design flag is well and truly hoisted this year and the initial signs were good. Around the central former factory area called ‘Strijp S’, there was a strong sense of urgency around finding new materials that are less toxic for the planet – though few of them were especially new or radical. We’ve seen algae-based plastic before. Mycellium (mushroom spores and their fibrous networks) have also been inspiring designers and artists for some time. Somewhat troubling was a sense that none of the big manufacturing companies or even research institutions are picking up the sustainable materials baton and doing anything useful with it in ways that might convert consumer impacts or behaviours. Philips was there, funnily enough, exhibiting a lamp made out of recycled fishing nets – a great excuse for clearing junk out of the oceans. Tere was one display on ‘Caleyda’, a ‘natural plastic substitute…without the disadvantages’. Made by bacteria, harvested from the aeration tanks
of wastewater treatment plants, and also broken down by bacteria, it was encouraging to see that the research into this product was supported by local government as well as water treatment and research organisations. But whether the product would be viable – or desirable – if produced at scale is another matter. Tere was an outdoor pavilion canopy made of solar panels but no information on how much of any of the resulting power was being provided by these panels to the festival. Like any body of student work, I guess, it can all feel a bit pie-in-the-sky. But there were some very viable-seeming propositions in the DAE graduate show. Highlights included Tomas Norman’s VTBF invention – a sustainable, strong and lightweight furniture material made from high-density bio-foam with a hard outer- edge wood veneer. Virgile Durando offered a solution to the invasive Japanese knotweed plant by reworking its dried form into a tough, woven material. And Gereon Wahle has found a way to repurpose the 2.49m tonnes of waste leather produced each year, by bonding shredded leather with biological hide glue to create new furnishing and upholstery ready material.
Pragmatic solutions were presented elsewhere, especially in furniture designer Piet Hein Eek’s factory space – a fabulous retrofit incorporating Hein Eek’s own design workshop along with studios, restaurant, a shop filled with covetable items (some of them, like Freitag, made from re-used lorry tarpaulins, sustainable to the core) and a small but elegant hotel. One of his exhibitors offered a stone-like material made from compressed rubble, which looked ready for specification (StoneCycling). Tis attractive site of retail, rest and production must do more, year-round, than any week-long fair to disseminate the importance and appeal of good, sustainable design.
But one of the benefits of this annual design focus is the audience it draws – in half-term week, the exhibition spaces were full of families
From right
Philips returned to its Eindhoven roots to showcase 3D printed lamps made from recycled fishing nets. A great theme of DDW 2022 was the search for sustainable, eco-friendly materials
VERONICA SIMPSON
VERONICA SIMPSON
Page 1 |
Page 2 |
Page 3 |
Page 4 |
Page 5 |
Page 6 |
Page 7 |
Page 8 |
Page 9 |
Page 10 |
Page 11 |
Page 12 |
Page 13 |
Page 14 |
Page 15 |
Page 16 |
Page 17 |
Page 18 |
Page 19 |
Page 20 |
Page 21 |
Page 22 |
Page 23 |
Page 24 |
Page 25 |
Page 26 |
Page 27 |
Page 28 |
Page 29 |
Page 30 |
Page 31 |
Page 32 |
Page 33 |
Page 34 |
Page 35 |
Page 36 |
Page 37 |
Page 38 |
Page 39 |
Page 40 |
Page 41 |
Page 42 |
Page 43 |
Page 44 |
Page 45 |
Page 46 |
Page 47 |
Page 48 |
Page 49 |
Page 50 |
Page 51 |
Page 52 |
Page 53 |
Page 54 |
Page 55 |
Page 56 |
Page 57 |
Page 58 |
Page 59 |
Page 60 |
Page 61 |
Page 62 |
Page 63 |
Page 64 |
Page 65 |
Page 66 |
Page 67 |
Page 68 |
Page 69 |
Page 70 |
Page 71 |
Page 72 |
Page 73 |
Page 74 |
Page 75 |
Page 76 |
Page 77 |
Page 78 |
Page 79 |
Page 80 |
Page 81 |
Page 82 |
Page 83 |
Page 84 |
Page 85 |
Page 86 |
Page 87 |
Page 88 |
Page 89 |
Page 90 |
Page 91 |
Page 92 |
Page 93 |
Page 94 |
Page 95 |
Page 96 |
Page 97 |
Page 98 |
Page 99 |
Page 100 |
Page 101 |
Page 102 |
Page 103 |
Page 104 |
Page 105 |
Page 106 |
Page 107 |
Page 108 |
Page 109 |
Page 110 |
Page 111 |
Page 112 |
Page 113