01 / 27
2019
Furniture Brand Hem's First US Showroom Opens in Downtown Los Angeles with a SiteSpecific Installation by Clark Thenhaus / Endemic Architecture.
For the opening of Hem’s first US showroom in Downtown Los Angeles in collaboration with Madera, the independent design brand has commissioned San Francisco-based designer Clark Thenhaus, founder and director of Endemic Architecture, to create a site-specific installation in the courtyard space of the new showroom. Confetti Courtyard is a vibrant installation that re-imagines the space as a lively and kinetic layering of architecture, furniture, landscape, and social activity.
Hem specializes in partnering with vanguard designers on innovative products and furnishings for the home and workspace. Confetti Courtyard, painted directly on the surfaces of the space’s floor and walls celebrates the immersive and collaborative nature of Hem’s new West Coast headquarters through the layering of colorful graphic shapes. Distributed throughout the courtyard as though they are oversized pieces of confetti, they create a loose organization with discrete spaces that cues visitors to move and interact in particular, nuanced ways.
The super-sized confetti graphics wrap up the walls and fold down onto the floors, implying rooms within the courtyard that sponsor social interactions, encourage active mingling, accommodate varied methods of display for future programming, and frame the courtyard as an immersive, colorful environment. Confetti Courtyard sets a uniquely animated backdrop for ongoing programming, activation, and display.
Confetti Courtyard in the Hem X Madera showroom is located at 810 Mateo Street in Downtown Los Angeles.
YOU MAY ALSO LIKE:
> Writer's Block in Los Angeles by CHA:COL
> MINI LIVING Urban Cabin Exhibited at the 2018 Los Angeles Design Festival
Furniture Brand Hem Showroom in LA by Endemic Architecture
01 / 27 / 2019 Furniture Brand Hem's First US Showroom Opens in Downtown Los Angeles with a SiteSpecific Installation by Clark Thenhaus / Endemic ArchitectureYou might also like:
Recommended post: Glass house by Nico Van Der Meulen Architects