Wright’s intricate pattern for a concrete block has been reincarnated as Offecct’s trademark acoustic panel Soundwave.
August 17th, 2018
“The cheapest (and ugliest) thing in the building world,” wrote Frank Lloyd Wright of concrete blocks in his autobiography. That said, he saw the potential of the material and wrote that he “would take that despised outcast of the building industry”, “find a hitherto unsuspected soul in it” and “make it live as a thing of beauty”.
And a thing of beauty he did create, which he called the textile concrete block. These were Wright-designed blocks that could be moulded on site into different patterns, giving the finished building an extraordinary decorative quality.
Wright’s exploration of this material in the 1920s yielded four textile-block houses in California, of which only one remains (and is now on the market for 21 million USD): the Ennis House. But the legacy of textile blocks continues thanks to Swedish furniture brand Offecct and the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation.
Wright’s intricate pattern for the Ennis House concrete block has been reincarnated as Offecct’s trademark acoustic panel Soundwave. Made from recyclable moulded polyester, Soundwave Ennis improves the sound quality in spaces as well as preserving a legendary architect’s exploration to ameliorate and assign additional value to a utilitarian material.
In Singapore, Offecct is carried by Flokk. Images courtesy of Offecct.
INDESIGN is on instagram
Follow @indesignlive
A searchable and comprehensive guide for specifying leading products and their suppliers
Keep up to date with the latest and greatest from our industry BFF's!
Schneider Electric’s new range are making bulky outlets a thing of the past with the new UNICA X collection.
In this candid interview, the culinary mastermind behind Singapore’s Nouri and Appetite talks about food as an act of human connection that transcends borders and accolades, the crucial role of technology in preserving its unifying power, and finding a kindred spirit in Gaggenau’s reverence for tradition and relentless pursuit of innovation.
XTRA celebrates the distinctive and unexpected work of Magis in their Singapore showroom.
Gaggenau’s understated appliance fuses a carefully calibrated aesthetic of deliberate subtraction with an intuitive dynamism of culinary fluidity, unveiling a delightfully unrestricted spectrum of high-performing creativity.
Wingates’ design of Greenwood Roche is sensitive to the history of the building without feeling overly nostalgic or heavy-handed.
Renaissance Tours is partnering with the Art Gallery of NSW for their Word Art Tours program, with Anthony Burke set to lead a visit to the USA.
The internet never sleeps! Here's the stuff you might have missed
Terrai by Sona Reddy Studio translates the cultural identity of Telangana into a dining experience through regional materials, craftsmanship and contemporary design.
Mountain Soil reimagines retail as an immersive, context-driven experience.