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351 Design Street

Duas amigas partilham boa arquitectura e design com uma pitada de fotografia e DIY. Tudo em três minutos ou menos. // Two friends share good architecture and design, with a dash of photography and DIY. All in 3 minutes or less

Água de Prata


João Bruno Videira, a Science Communication graduate, created Água de Prata in 2006. With a job in the city, João dropped everything to be a self-taught craftsman and designer and moved to Graça do Divor, a small village between Arraiolos and Évora, in Alentejo, Portugal.
Like the TASA project I wrote about here, Água de Prata’s main goal is to combine traditional crafts techniques with contemporary design and needs. Arraiolos wool is the main material and its use is constantly reinvented with each new piece, making it unique and unrepeatable.

Marta.



















Água de Prata


João Bruno Videira, a Science Communication graduate, created Água de Prata in 2006. With a job in the city, João dropped everything to be a self-taught craftsman and designer and moved to Graça do Divor, a small village between Arraiolos and Évora, in Alentejo, Portugal.
Like the TASA project I wrote about here, Água de Prata’s main goal is to combine traditional crafts techniques with contemporary design and needs. Arraiolos wool is the main material and its use is constantly reinvented with each new piece, making it unique and unrepeatable.

Marta.



















TASA project - crafts' future

The TASA project combines the materials and techniques of the traditional crafts with the strategic innovation so important nowadays: the design, packaging and image of a product.
With several items somehow innovative, when compared to the products typically produced by craftsmen, the TASA project intends to demonstrate that it is possible to have a contemporary crafted product.

Marta.

















Photos by TASA

Encaustic cement tiles - the storytellers!


This past week I read at A Ervilha Cor de Rosa a post about encaustic cement tiles. A few years ago I would passthese and would not give them much thought, but nowadays looking at a floor (or wall!) that has them will make my day! But what is encaustic cement tile and what’s the story behind it?
Encaustic cement tiles – or hydraulic tiles - are completely handmade made from cement that is hardened through a hydraulic press instead of being baked. The art of encaustic cement tiles was born in southern France in the late 19th century, but spread largely to Spain, Italy, England and Portugal. It was popular for its resistance and decorative qualities: with encaustic cement tiles you can tell several different stories. It was considered exclusive to the upper class of the time due to its manual manufacturing process.
With the industrialization of the 60s other less elaborate and more profitable materials gradually replaced it and it was, eventually, forgotten and almost disappeared. However, in recent years we have witnessed a reuse of this material in contemporary architecture with retro touches. Therefore, we’re entering a major new phase of manufacture. Of course this new phase, as Rosa Pomar said in her post "mosaico hidráulico 2.0", has both good and bad consequences. The good? The new impulse due to the vintage and retro trend going on right now, resulting in more fans and more manufacturers and invariably more options. The bad? Poor quality imitations in which the pattern is printed.
The real encaustic cement tile still has to be produced as it was originally; despite the technological advances, it is still impossible to industrially reproduce the colors, matte finish and soft texture of the handmade mosaic.

Marta.

via pinterest
via pinterest
via oppa

via mosaic del sur
via mosaic del sur
via arquitete
via egue & seta

Designing a room: basic rules


Designing a room can be a gift for some, but a real nightmare for many others.
If you’re just like me and belong to the nightmare group, you should know that we’re probably just overthinking the whole thing! And in the end we just hate the result...
That’s why I always follow some basic rules when designing a room or an entire house!

Pick a neutral color. Black and White are the most common ones, but nowadays grey is a viable option. Go crazy with that neutral one!

via villa extramuros
via desire to inspire
Pick a second color. It should be a contrasting one and the livelier the better! This color will bring life and fun to the room and you should apply it in the little details.


via villa extramuros
via remodelista
via desire to inspire
Choose something that relates to you. A photo, a painting, a collection of quirky objects will help you define the room as your own.


via a beautiful mess

via that nordic feeling
via l'ouvrier
via houzz
Remember that less is more! So, in the end, if it seems like something is missing, try taking something out instead. You might be amazed with the result.

Marta.




O Moderno Escondido – The [increasingly] Hidden Modern

During a recent trip to Trás-os-Montes (Portugal) I witnessed an extraordinary example of Portuguese modernist urbanism and architecture of 50s, which Michele Cannatà and Fátima Fernandes of Cannatà e Fernandes, have designated as “Moderno Escondido”, or the Hidden Modern (an investigation that resulted in an exhibition and a book “Modern Escondido: Arquitectura das Centrais Hidroeléctricas do Douro 1953-1964: Picote, Miranda, Bemposta”, FAUP Publicações, 1997). 

Inn, revovated by Cannatà e Fernandes. Photo platform[az]©
The Residential Complex of Picote, built during the construction of the Douro dams, designed by Archer de Carvalho, Nunes de Almeida and Rogério Ramos, architects who graduated from ESBAP, in Oporto, Portugal, was designed to be an “ideal city”, a city built from scratch, with the necessary infrastructures to become a self-sufficient system for 4000 thousand people.

Houses for the executive staff. Photo platform[az]©
The complex reflects contemporary modernist influences of Le Corbusier and the propositions of the Athens Charter, and blends it with Portuguese culture. It includes a housing area for workers, a school, a church, a shopping mall, houses for the executive staff and an inn.

Chapel. Photo platform[az]©
Inn. Photo platform[az]©
Inn. Photo platform[az]©
In my visit I had access to the executive staff’s houses. These were abandoned and, with no preservation works in the horizon, will continue its natural (or, sometimes, un-natural) process of degradation. However, the quality of the materials is still visible: wood, Portuguese tiles, stone, among others.

Houses for the executive staff. Photo platform[az]©
Houses for the executive staff. Photo platform[az]©
Houses for the executive staff. Photo platform[az]©
Houses for the executive staff. Photo platform[az]©
The 2011 short film Ruínas de Portugal – O Moderno Escondido (by RR productions, image by Manuel Barreto and editing by Rui Gonçalves) shows the advanced degradation of the houses.

Houses for the executive staff. Photo platform[az]©
Houses for the executive staff. Photo platform[az]©
Trás-os-Montes discloses many wonderful settings, some more hidden than others.
Have a good trip!

Ana