BDDO is an agency engaged in the field of large-scale Global advertising based in New York. When this project tendering brief began, the client wanted a very different and dynamic office shades which can provoke creative ideas from the employees. Thus we made a very unique, eye-catching and philosophically creative design that is applied to almost all the elements in the interior design of this Indonesia BBDO Office. Starting from the work table, floor, furniture, lights, doors, wall elements, to the lighting concept, each area has a unique and different lighting concept with warm white tone.
The brief was to create a maximum enclosure out of an existing two storey pitch roof house to contain a clothing shop plus an administration office forming a headquarter of a local Bandung clothing company SIXPAX
Balinese architecture mainly formed as “bale”, a simple rectangular structure with stone blocks as base and wooden column in each corner, topped with pyramid traditional thatched roof. These structure used as house, social building and spiritual building in early architecture era in 1400s Bali. In 1900s Balinese architectural form merged with modern architecture when concrete was invented in greater part of Bali.
spaces design for leisure are continually surpassing their predecessors in boldness and originality. Architects in recent years have been able to more freely express thier full creative potential in use of new idioms, new materials and singular forms, creating distinct, almost theatrical atmospheres in bar, restaurants, and clubs. There has been a tendency toward making each work a reference in itself, giving it that distinctive mark which sets it apart from the rest……..Carles Broto; introduction; Clubs & Bars Design; Linkbooks, Barcelona, Spain.
Kaleydo Hotel is a hospitality project located in Gili Trawangan island of Lombok, Indonesia. The client asked for a contemporary concept which considers the vernacular character of the area. Without being in so much resemblance of the aesthetics and style of Indonesian architecture, StudiSTAG started analyzing the vernacular in a function and usefulness guidance. A more contemporary approach reached by evaluating the ratios of the vernacular, rationalizing the Indonesian style and using the local techniques and materials.
This is a house where tropical meets modern style in Jakarta. The house sits on the flat 1500 sqm land in a residential area. The house consists of two zones; the main zone is the house and the other is a pavilion, both face a large swimming pool.
This was the challenge Atelier TT was given with regards a project brief by a client who owns several businesses. As such, Atelier TT focused on the creation of a social platform which encourages interactions between the occupants and helps to turn neighbours into friends.
Marunda is a beach in northern Jakarta shoreline, where huge container ships dock in this place. The fragments of concrete piles functioned as wave breaker and box‐shaped building with sloped roofing, lined in a row on the calm shoreline. From the open sea, those buildings looked alike with each other, often render the sailors difficult to find the place to dock.
Kineforum Misbar was a temporary open-air cinema built as part of the 2013 Jakarta Biennale, an international contemporary art event held in the Indonesian capital. It was the result of collaboration between architects Csutoras & Liando (http://www.csutorasandliando.com) and Kineforum (http://kineforum.org/web), a non-profit organization that runs the only cinema in Jakarta dedicated to international and local art-house and independent movies.
The concept of Ananta Legian Hotel lobby is inspired by BentarTemple which is described as a ”Kori Agung” that functioned as a gate. The grand steps towards the Lobby from the lower floor express the greatness of the Lobby as the “Kori Agung”. The balinese Serai stones are used in the building facade together with the pond and water fountain around the lobby to create ambience of balinese temple and the place of sacred liturgy of Hindu ceremony by pedanda—the high priest in Bali.