molo

11
molo design, ltd. 1470 Venables Street Vancouver, B.C. Canada, V5L 2G7 t +1 604 696 2501 f +1 604 685 0342 [email protected] www.molodesign.com flexible design for sustainable living: molo’s soft collection

Upload: the-office-republic

Post on 03-Mar-2016

213 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

1470 Venables Street Vancouver, B.C. Canada, V5L 2G7 molo design, ltd. t +1 604 696 2501 f +1 604 685 0342 [email protected] www.molodesign.com

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Molo

m o l o d e s i g n , l t d .

1 4 7 0 Ve n a b l e s S t r e e tV a n c o u v e r , B . C .C a n a d a , V 5 L 2 G 7

t + 1 6 0 4 6 9 6 2 5 0 1f + 1 6 0 4 6 8 5 0 3 4 2

i n f o @ m o l o d e s i g n . c o mw w w. m o l o d e s i g n . c o m

f l e x i b l e d e s i g n f o r s u s t a i n a b l e l i v i n g : m o l o ’ s s o f t c o l l e c t i o n

Page 2: Molo

Environmentally sustainable design considerations for molo’s soft collection can be described in 3 main categories.

1. Flexibility, to make efficient and adaptable use of space

2. Efficient use of material resources, through lightweight/high strength honeycomb structures

3. Responsible material choices, such as recycled/recyclable materials and non toxic adhesives

Flexible use of space is the fundamental idea behind soft collection with its honeycomb structures that expand, contract and flex to form sculptural walls, seating topographies and lighting. This began with the sustainable idea of looking at how to make the most of small urban spaces for living and working and how to transform these spaces to suit many types of use in the course of a day and over the life of a building. softwall + softblock modular system can be used to create smaller intimate spaces, such as offices, meeting rooms or bedrooms, within a larger open plan. These smaller spaces can then be folded away when not in use, giving the volume back to the main room. Requiring no tracks, built in supports or infrastructure softwall + softblock modular system, offers a truly flexible way to adapt a space or building to many uses. softwall + softblock further function to shape the acoustics and light of a space. The vertical cells of softwall serve to dampen sound while the translucent softwall + softblock provide illumination with integrated LED ribbons.

Efficient use of material is inherent to the honeycomb geometry of soft collection. A little bit of material goes a very long way… opening softwall is a magical experience as the honeycomb expands to create a free standing structure; hundreds of times larger than its compressed form. All softwall + softblock elements are flexible in length; expanding to just over 4.5 meters (15’) and that same dimension can be compressed to the mere thickness of a book, less than 50mm (2”).

soft collection recognizes the value of humble materials that are commonly thought of as disposable. Given their functional flexibility and resilient strength, softwalls are intended to remain useful over a long life. Nevertheless, they are not expected to last forever and so each of the three materials used, tissue paper, unbleached kraft paper and polyethylene non woven textile, are all made with recycled content and are 100% recyclable. The kraft paper is made with 50% recycled cardboard box fibre and 50% new long fibre. The new long fibres give strength; reinforcing the matrix of smaller recycled fibre to make a stiff robust paper. Polyethylene, commonly used in food packaging, is recycled more than any other plastic. The adhesives used in laminating soft are non toxic and non yellowing. And the fire retardant in soft’s paper products is a non toxic salt based treatment. Bamboo charcoal ink is used to create the black versions of the textile and paper soft elements.

Through its function, design and materials, molo’s soft collection aims to minimize environmental damage and provide flexible solutions for contemporary living.

f l e x i b l e d e s i g n f o r s u s t a i n a b l e l i v i n g : m o l o ’ s s o f t c o l l e c t i o n

Page 3: Molo
Page 4: Molo
Page 5: Molo

cloud_photo_card.indd 1 12/03/10 5:16 PM

Page 6: Molo
Page 7: Molo
Page 8: Molo
Page 9: Molo
Page 10: Molo
Page 11: Molo