vincent wittenberg and guy königstein: streeeeeet bench

'streeeeeet bench'
eindhoven-based designers vincent wittenberg and guy königstein have developed a series of
alternative street infrastructure for common urban spaces.
the street usually refers to the pavements, roads and traffic islands - areas which have the potential
to offer new design opportunities. following this perception, one can initiate collaborative and participative
urban processes, from which both the municipality and the residents profit, eventually creating a more interesting
and vivid street.

the bench is made up of individual chairs which can be released and used separately by inserting a five shekel coin
for their project entitled 'streeeeeet', the duo came up with a series of interventions realized in bat-yam, israel,
one observation they made of the residents' habits was use of private chairs in public spaces.
although the arcades in front of the shops might be publicly used within the street, the area officially belongs
to the shops. every morning the shop keepers place a chair in front of their stores and use it throughout the day.
wittenberg and königstein have proposed to the municipality to replace existing public benches with an option
that consists of individual seats. working on a system similar to that of paying to use a shopping cart at the grocery store,
here, the bench itself is a docking station. using a five shekel coin, one can release a seat and place it in a different spot.
the deposit is returned when one brings the seat back.

a chair being used individually

releasing the chairs

detail

the bench in use


observations from bat-yam

observations from bat-yam

observations from bat-yam
smart shopping cart
pilot testing has begun for a 'smart cart' program where tablet PCs installed on shopping carts synch with users' smartphones to provide store and product information tailored to shoppers' needs.
set + drift: shopping cart farming
this experimental project uses abandoned and repurposed shopping carts as the main tool in growing portable gardens. in doing this, the goal was to create a replicable model for urban cultivation and pocket farms.
vincent wittenberg and guy königstein: p
'public wardrobe' is a response to the behaviour of bat-yam residents who collect their old clothes or belongings in a plastic bag. this design encourages people to expose more personal items in public.
pensa: street charge
the simple intervention looks to harness the potential of our current street infrastructure as a platform in which to give our mobiles and other portable devices a quick recharge.
jeppe hein: modified social benches l-u
the selection of altered benches invite the seaside passersby to enter into a once-average interaction which questions the nature of utilitarian public objects with playful reinterpretations.
share portable park chair
each equipped with a coin-operated lock, the chairs provide an efficient solution to the needs for flexible public seating, nesting together when not in use.
alejandro delgado: amparo
ramos bassols: ligera for urbes21
design time breil award ceremony
curved visions digital art competit
GRAPHIC DESIGN - may 17 - july 17
SHOPPING - may 17 - july 17
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