A Clean BreakPrint Page

October 17, 2008 - 11:00am - 7:00pm

A Clean Break
In October a vacant lot on Broad Street will become a pop-up neighborhood with full-scale modern, sustainable and affordable homes designed by architects.  In conjunction with DesignPhiladelphia and National Design Week 2008, the exhibition of modular and prefabricated homes will be on view to the public from October 17th to 30th at 313 South Broad at Spruce Street, with an opening on Oct 16th from 7:00 to 10:00 PM. 

 

The exhibition features innovative design solutions from international architects and designers and addresses issues of urban infill, 21st century development and sustainability.  “It is our aim,” says Eugenie Perret, owner of the Minima gallery and co-curator of A Clean Break, “to go beyond merely proposing innovative housing solutions, but to provide the opportunity for Philadelphians to experience them firsthand.”

 

A Clean Break will feature three-dimensional structures through which visitors can walk and two-dimensional installations that will inspire viewers.  The residential work in the exhibition includes:

 

WeeHouse, designed by Alchemy Architects of St. Paul, a full-scale modular house made locally by environmentally-sensitive fabricators; on loan from Saturn/General Motors
MiniHome, designed by Sustain Design Studio of Toronto, a full-scale house /  “urban RV” with green roof, sustainable materials, and healthy finishes
Habitat Home, commissioned for exhibition and designed by Gans Studio & dArchitects of New York, an installation in partnership with Habitat for Humanity, Philadelphia
Interface Studio Architects of Philadelphia, an installation featuring the 100K House, Sheridan Street Houses & the Hancock Street Modular project
Studio 804, University of Kansas, flatpack installation of prefab work by the celebrated design / build graduate student program
 

The outdoor exhibition also features urban farming, environmentally-friendly furniture, lighting, transportation, public art and other high-design, low-waste consumer products, including the following:

 

Grow System commissioned bus shelter by SMIT Studio of Brooklyn, NY
Greensgrow of Philadelphia, Urban farm installation
Inliquid of Philadelphia, outdoor public art installation
Leaning Molds by Maruja Fuentes of Puerto Rico, Outdoor seating installation
Hybrid Car by Saturn
Iannone Design of Philadelphia, Furniture installation
Powercube by Reluminati of Washington, DC, Solar generator to power event facilities
Functional Sculpture by Alchemy Architects, outdoor lighting installation
Philadelphia Bicycle Coalition
 

“Innovation in design can and should be an option for all Philadelphians regardless of economic status,” said co-curator Elizabeth Oliver, “This exhibition promotes ‘clean’ development – aesthetically and ecologically – and the modern homes displayed here are refreshing, honest, and a true indicator of the future of design.”

 

A Clean Break will be open daily from 11:00 AM to 7:00 PM from October 17th through  30th.  The exhibition is free and open to the public.  Curated by Minima gallery in Old City.  Visit www.acleanbreak.org .

 

 

DesignPhiladelphia, now entering its fourth year, is an umbrella organization and cultural initiative administered by The Design Center at Philadelphia University.  During a week-long celebration, approximately 60 participants – uniting businesses, academic institutions, and professional associations – offer exhibitions, book signings, workshops, symposia, hardhat tours, and open studios, all related to creativity, innovation and design.  DesignPhiladelphia 2008 is scheduled for Oct 16th through 22th.  Nearly every event is free and open to the public.  Contact Hilary Jay, jayh@philau.edu and Beth Van Why, beth@designphiladelphia.org .  Visit www.designphiladelphia.org .

 

Minima is Philadelphia’s premier destination for high-design furniture, home accessories and interior solutions.  Located in Old City, Minima’s gallery showroom is curated to reflect the historic and current strides in avant-garde modern interior design.  Minima was founded in 1999 by artist and interior designer Eugenie Perret, who creates modern interiors for corporate and residential clients throughout the world.  Contact Eugenie Perret, eperret@minima.us and Elizabeth Oliver, eoliver@minima.us , Minima Gallery, 215.922.2002, www.minima.us.

 

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Contact: Eugenie Perret, eperret@minima.us, Elizabeth Oliver, eoliver@minima.us 

215.922.2002, Images of works in the exhibition are available from the curators.

Location

313 South Broad Street At Spruce
Philadelphia, PA
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