Skip to main content

tv   Euromaxx  Deutsche Welle  April 7, 2019 8:30am-9:01am CEST

8:30 am
don't miss out on what's the connection between bread but home and the european union the nose gear about a job you correspondent the baker can stripes this backyard with the rules set by the new team. cuts through north. stepping recipes for success the strategies that make a difference. baking bread on the d.w. . no way it is home to the world's tallest wooden building beside the lake the new structure is more than eighty five need to.
8:31 am
welcome to this edition of your own max which this time around focuses on aka texture and still zine here two of today's topics. snouts how design classics get modern make over and it's. been fun it's a new project up cycles of plastic waste into colorful top. one hundred years ago a very special school was founded the bauhaus its architecture design and art found fans around the globe the baja school was open for just fourteen years but that was long enough to create a form that still influences our lifestyles today we take a brief look back at how it all again. the whole school was founded in via modern one thousand nine hundred architect of. record of the most famous
8:32 am
artists of the time six years later the ball house moved to. the school building itself stood for a new kind of architecture functional and unadorned the principal form follows function the result revolutionary ideas that transcended the boundaries of design painting and architecture. buildings can be found all over the world is here until the v. and powerhouse furnishings are now designed classics. this folding chair was designed in one thousand nine hundred twenty seven and those in the know recognize it as a classic by design. and at first glance this chair also looks like the original but look again until you'll see it's been given a colorful revamp the form remains the same but the fabrics been papped up to celebrate one hundred years of bauhaus the german furniture maker is giving these
8:33 am
souls design classics and you and khalaf a look. this is a says director's chair from nine hundred twenty two twenty three. and here's it's twenty eighteen re-interpretation. this is every bend of the table from one nine hundred twenty four. and here's the twenty eighteen edition. about house now house presents design classics from the bow house school and a new look. these are the works of german furniture makers christiane. i did what he thought was we didn't want to put our house originals on a pedestal and view them as the museum pieces that they often are today while still quite the opposite we wanted to take them down from the museum pedestal and bring them back to life. and that's why that's our goal because we make furniture. so we got together with young designers to show this ball house furniture in
8:34 am
a new light the balls move it in noiseless. christiane there is an expert when it comes to bauhaus furniture for over forty years his company has been reproducing classics from the one nine hundred twenty s. . strictly according to the original designs. one of the main principles of the bauhaus school was form follows function so every piece of furniture is suitable for daily use but that's not all. that's then this these are more than a regular piece of the yarn a trolley moved through there not just ordinary sofas and chairs was their furnishings with spirit and somehow the transport and exude that. craftspeople and designers work together in the tech the workshops in the town of la and further lower saxony. it's a work process that was also practiced by bauhaus founder has.
8:35 am
basic idea of reuniting art with technology art with crafts. was at the core of the powerhouse spirit and school of thought that being one of those balls was and it was very important to the results produced by the school. and many of the classic pieces have now been reinterpreted by young designers for about house now house. based designer cutting dryly tackled in a fifty one vote of gopi assist director's chair. at all sort of about the challenge was how much or how little can i do to this chair so that it remains true to vote. but at the same time is recognizable as a new interpretation from twenty nine thousand and one. using new services and upholstery styling created six different versions of the chair. they still look modern say day and for her that's proof bauhaus designers were far ahead of their time. and it's nice amazing to look at
8:36 am
the collections from a century ago but they were full of strange and utopian ideas which never became socially acceptable now you know just so what. if i took a look at us and the others made back then in an ordinary house. in them and their minds holes. in this one hundredth anniversary year of its founding the bauhaus designs still have the power to inspire. jennifer but off month from berlin creates bashings which pay homage to the design school. german croatian industrial designer constantine burchett's creates bauhaus inspired pieces. and austrian label noise about i wear has dedicated designs for sunglasses to architect about to go p.s. and painter. furniture maker quest on the fresh lead believes that the current popularity of bauhaus classics is more than just a recurring trend. in movement that would exist furniture is timeless you know
8:37 am
that's where the other things that were created there. and the architecture. but what really excites us and spurs us on is the spirit of the school of thought is that think surely. whether bauhaus or now house whether from nine hundred nineteen or twenty nineteen these pieces of furniture only reveal their true age at second glance. in today's show we're focusing on architecture and design and in our next report we have for the top off a very special structure that yes the tower in norway is the world's tallest wooden high rise and because skyscrapers anomaly birth with concrete and steel and this friend here tim a construction is an architectural might still. the wooden high rise on the shore of lake near the norway valley has eighteen stories eighty five and a half meters high it's the tallest wouldn't building ever to be built worldwide.
8:38 am
the project was the fulfillment of a personal dream for developers. it's a symbol of what is possible. to make it good complicated buildings and also the high rise buildings and how to reduce c o two this is sixty percent lower c o two than in steel and concrete you think clearer and clearer so it's healthier both for people but also for the nature. of life but that we can have an apartment on the fifteenth floor.
8:39 am
is thoroughly enjoys being surrounded by wood. i feed the birds you can smell the birds all the good you see makes. doing something with you so i think it's more like living. concrete right so you feel that the building is living actually with you. it took years of pioneering work to make the wooden tower impermeable to wind and weather. it was designed by. a company specialized in temper construction. project coordinator. ventured into new architectural territory. we have never done anything like this before so it was always about believing that it is possible a lot of hard work and a long night trying to figure out how can we do this the biggest problem. lightness
8:40 am
of the material so all the force of the external force as they will try to tilt the building or shift it. a little bearing called had to be something deeper into the ground than usual. proofing was never a major issue the thick wooden beams can withstand the bleeds even longer than steel another factor behind the trend in building with timber. eighty four meter building under construction in vienna is also not afford or don't france is building an entire development with eco friendly material and architects in london are planning a three hundred meter tower meter book. i think it's a symbol of the green shift we have mental to think about and using. a friendly method of building. for the future not necessarily tall buildings but now every building who can use that. wooden high rise also offers
8:41 am
a hotel and conference rooms. the higher you go and the more you sense the wooden surroundings. residents of the upper floors have to get used to the creaking in the swaying of the timber believes. if we in this area would have storms i think you can feel it a bit more like you think you feel it. it's living material so sore i think you really hear something and that's normal and this is good. so far wouldn't highrises remain the exception but the musa tower is a good example of what apartment buildings could look like in years to come.
8:42 am
and with that. this plastic bottle has served its purpose now it's trash every year more than three hundred million tonnes of plastic and up on the cheap that some people are looking for ways to encourage us to reduce this problem one project by greek architect and through the design our panel sac us doesn't just aim to make us aware of this problem but also helps to brighten up his city and the project goes by the name of print your city. plastic recycled into a new form with a new function. the seeding elements and the greek port city of thessaloniki are part of a project called print your city. plastic waste disposal i called this furniture from a three d. printer. the idea came from a dutch design studio the new rock. from greece is one of the projects founders.
8:43 am
plastic is a mis understood material which is it's not the material that's the problem for us to go to and how we use it packaging for example yeah but i did my skill as it might only be used for a few seconds but it never degrades but you know if we use it in some other way later we can change things and improve our lives. this is precisely what kano soccer's hopes to achieve with the project. is the guy who designed the furniture to allow people to experience public spaces in a new way with different last years. rather than sitting right they can relax a bit more if they were sitting in their own living room. this is the feeling we'd like to put across these and bring private living space into public spaces and the fate of the most. anyone who wishes to participate can suggest designs online or select pieces of furniture from the various templates the ones that are selected
8:44 am
most often go into print try to save the earth and i was so happy when i was walking through town one day and saw that a bench i had designed had been printed in the us and then it's there for everyone thank you to the others that you know. as soon as a new design template goes online the amount of recycled plastic needed for the three d. printing process is calculated automatically. at the zero waste or research initiative of the new raw people in festal uneek you can find out about recycling and deposit the plastic trash cleaned sorted shredded and melted down. personally i don't like to just throw things out at all but it was a side i think we ought to have a responsible attitude toward our planet. after all we use its resources year by year. it takes about seventy kilos of plastic and ten hours to make a park bench from a three d. printer.
8:45 am
nine of the colorful seats have already been placed around for saloniki center and more plans for eventual leave the idea is to spread them all around the city. the combination of recycling and design is proving a hit with the locals and visitors alike. it's very impressive to see that you can transform waste into something a static in this way to make your pick you know not everyone can enjoy it and sit here with their friends it's a definite gain. nothing negative about it might be part of. the print your city project was launched in cooperation with the city of saloniki the younger generation in particular for the target group. we're going to keep it going we've already agreed to place more furniture pieces in other neighborhoods. i think it encourages a new culture and approach to issues like recycling zero waste production.
8:46 am
among young people. and if the park benches ever fall apart they'll simply be recycled if it's a good idea and a sustainable one. today's show you know max is focusing on and design paul is studying architecture so you could say that already makes him a bit of an expert he says we live in a world that is great and drop and as a keen photographer he shows us how somebody can look a lot better she just at a splash of color. gray reality becomes colorful urban fantasy geometric the sods are canvases for splashes of color. photographer and architecture student ice transforms the often plain structures into genuine i
8:47 am
catchers. so many buildings don't get seen because they've been simply painted grey like the rest of the city and so they almost disappear in the fishman and. who comes from berlin found the many grey on grey cityscapes to dreary so in two thousand and fifteen he started shooting his colorful photo series. now he's studying in linz austria where an old tobacco factory has become a favorite setting. the industrial complex was built in the new objectivity style later famed as val house design in the early twentieth century it was a new approach to architecture. is fascinated by it. and so it did look at the details of the windows and what a clever solution this mechanism is fine the structure you find usually was totally new back down with that one if this is it's as if you installed a spaceship somewhere today and said this is the new architecture i think. i sees
8:48 am
his photos as a criticism of contemporary architecture. he says modern designs lack a spirit of experimentation and courageous ideas. doesn't the industrial building and construction methods that were developed back then were implemented because they offered a way to build a lot for a little money if you. concept of progress behind them didn't take hold at all we have no innovations in architecture. can add colorful accents he turns an apartment block and lintz into an artwork in primary colors red yellow and blue. inspired by dutch painter piet mondrian. he also cites architects from the powerhouse tradition bruno touts design for workers housing in berlin placed equal emphasis on form functionality and color. architecture photographer
8:49 am
apologizes giving the tobacco factory a thorough remodeling. on his computer he removes unwanted elements corrects the perspective and colors in various surfaces. this is not quite the primary colors used by boat house but rather a more up to date interpretation with. this image to serve as a call for more courage in architecture. after he graduates hopes to design innovative buildings of his own colorful ones of course. luke was one of the most famous architects and furniture design is of the twentieth century born in switzerland he fell in love with the mediterranean and built a little holiday home death to get away from it all and enjoy french lifestyle in the early one nine hundred fifty s.
8:50 am
called the couple know it's located in the small town. on the french of the clades unesco world heritage sites in twenty sixteen of acacia home is the smallest of. things to make the list the site is open to the public starting in may we got an exclusive preview tool from an expert. my dear i believe that i would use a better guy scott and i've been getting two hours of a copy of his vacation home for twenty years now well because it was today i want to share this passion with you and show you the sea and his friends love to spend their holidays in when they hear it best they did at. the back. in august of this it all began with this beautiful house from nine hundred twenty nine by eileen gray and john but if i didn't graze on by the roots the fact that it was an architectural icon of the time feel for this that the
8:51 am
book look obviously offensive and nine hundred thirty nine o'clock well he was a friend of john but if each innocent wanted. it it is clear that we have agreed to by the. was if this is the course you call this has been four to six weeks and every year. this is it one more you can unwind here that was very important so he could recharge his bashings who also see. the big. like this small door leads to his had to come on no. he has to say they built a chateau on the mediterranean as a birthday present for his wife son and their many balance in fact it was his little paradise. look obviously affected you wanted to try out a minimalist holiday lifestyle for himself this. they could mean months.
8:52 am
and tell you all about all the room is very small with three emmys or sixty six by three meters sixty six by two me just twenty six nickel and prove that it had everything you need that was along you know there was a living area with a table and two stools that you could stand on to reach the storage space above the ceiling like all. of the yak were to the west to me as a wardrobe withdraw as a car truck and sliding doors of a good but this one couldn't sound at all if it could remember it's pretty short so it's got lots of space above it. so all the furniture is multi-functional the bed where yvonne jacobus his wife slept as large straw was. the only thing she didn't like was that she slept with her head right next to the toilet. while it
8:53 am
was at one thirty then there is a low table with a drawer that was full of look obviously lead to mattresses on the floor to sleep on. my songs that were that he always a set the restaurant next door on the. i couldn't get my noise. in this little secret door but. here there is a safe way to cope with his money and his wife's jewelry. was wrong. there probably is a look of is there really like the friendly atmosphere in there it's what america stands for obama or what is the photos show him eating with friends on the terrace . that you can see he was really friendly with the enemies to be able to talk which
8:54 am
i would at the bare. form for he designed a vacation facility for the restaurant and that's the famous facility right nearby . when is offered to come along now i'll show you look obvious his studio. was a boring some propriety it was only a symbol working surface. you're going to the states with two whiskey crates he painted himself to send them all recorded. as musical that. the probably very good to see came from switzerland but he hated the mountains he
8:55 am
called happiness by the sea but will it be to the song pacific city or are you giving them their ear and here in harpoon he found the little haven of what he said he'd always wished for and what they think you are never going to look. ok. for our your m x d a y u two of series how to bauhaus architect. has reinterpreted some of the classics now you have a chance to win three of them a lamp and two wooden stools all you have to do if you want to enter the draw is send us a photo of a place in your house where these pieces could find a new home you can find out all the details on our website and that's all we have time for today glad you could join us for this special edition of your magazine and we all look forward to seeing you again i back.
8:56 am
to. the book.
8:57 am
wow house in berlin nicole for looking for all things related to the legendary art school in the german capital and more labor what was that like and what still makes that's what i want to find out today there are architecture and chocolate.
8:58 am
coming up w. . take it personally it's wonderful people and stories that makes it so special for you whether. true or. false. the book. thirty minutes on d w. gold. india. how can a country's economy grow can harmony its people plant code when they are doing our
8:59 am
school look at the bigger picture. india a country that faces many challenges the first sentence people are striving to create a sustainable future cleverbot projects from europe and coke india on t.w. . cut. your link to news from africa and the world join us on facebook t w africa. and that worry you. should lose respect. be assumed to come close to the. female premium show some respect. to. the flavor of each of the space above.
9:00 am
the small scholorship of the mists. columba blah blah blah. blah blah blah blah blah blah blah lol blame the sun. israeli prime minister binyamin netanyahu has promised to begin annexing jewish settlements in the occupied west bank if reelected the policy u.-turn is being seen as a last minute bid to rally right wing supporters ahead of next week's election under international law the settlements are viewed as illegal. and.

44 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on