ADVERTISEMENT
You will be redirected to your destination in 15 seconds.
Subscribe to Interior Design
Comment
RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email

Share this on
Facebook
LinkedIn
Twitter

Rock the Cradle

Interior Design Staff -- Interior Design, 11/19/2010 3:39:41 AM

intervention

Installing the silvery spheres of Cradle on a Los Angeles garage required a Hollywood-worthy cast of characters. The creators, Benjamin Ball and Gaston Nogues of Ball-Nogues Studio, naturally take top billing. They were selected by a committee that included Larry Scarpa of Brooks + Scarpa Architects, design architects. TFO Architecture filled the executive role. And behind the scenes was Frank O. Gehry & Associates, which designed the Santa Monica Place shopping mall and its garage in 1980. interventionSeveral renovations later, Omniplan and the Jerde Partnership have transformed the mall into a bright and lively enclave of boutiques and restaurants arrayed around an alfresco plaza, and public art was part of the program.


Typically, Ball-Nogues explores a concept, a material, or a series. Cradle does all three. "We were interested in packing things together and the effect that gravity would have on them," Ball begins. These notions led to thoughts of the desktop toy called Newton's cradle, its metal balls suspended on wires from a steel frame to demonstrate the conservation of momentum as identified by Isaac Newton. That's how 350 hollow orbs of mirror-polished stainless steel came to be the components of Cradle. Varying in size and shape, they hang from cables anchored to a stainless-steel bracket, creating an architectural Rorschach test. Store awning or upsidedown bouquet of balloons? "It looks like a bikini brief," Nogues offers. Given the beach proximity, his interpretation is probably best. -Edie Cohen

Comment
RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email

Share this on
Facebook
LinkedIn
Twitter

Talkback
Related Content
»MORE

Advertisement
More Content
  • Photos

On the Phone

From the Magazine:
Gensler dialed up bright color for Nokia in Silicon Valley--and the IIDA answered with an award.
+ Read the Article

Just for Kids

From the Magazine:
Two schools in the southern German town of Tuttlingen share this student center, one of the few that's both freestanding and purpose-built.
Firm: Heinisch Lembach Huber Architekten
Site: Tuttlingen, Germany
+ Read the Article

A Cinematic Moment

From the Magazine:
In Vila do Conde, Portugal, a mansion from the 1500's now houses the Saint Roch Solar Gallery cultural center, as well as a dormitory for the Superior School of Industrial Studies and Managment.
+ Read the Article