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- <text id=90TT3518>
- <title>
- Dec. 31, 1990: Design:Best Of '90
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Dec. 31, 1990 The Best Of '90
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- DESIGN, Page 46
- BEST OF '90
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Beverly Hills Civic Center. Civility and elegance are
- virtues not generally found in contemporary Southern California
- architecture. But Charles Moore's $110 million center is just
- about perfect. The new stucco-and-concrete complex (including
- police and fire departments and a library) envelops and quietly
- takes its stylistic cues from the Art-Deco-cum-Spanish 1931 city
- hall. Fantasy and propriety can coexist.
- </p>
- <p> Access Floor Workstation Module. Rarely does something as
- banal as an electrical outlet seem thrillingly ingenious. But
- Alan Brownlie's module is just such a small delight. Cords and
- cables thread tidily through slots in a plastic door flush with
- the floor. When the door opens, sockets pop up for easy access.
- </p>
- <p> Dick Tracy. The look of Warren Beatty's movie was worth the
- admission price. Instead of jam-packing the screen with
- virtuoso, look-at-this-wild-thing flourishes a la Batman,
- production designer Richard Sylbert drenched every piece of
- masonry, metal and fabric on the Universal back lot in a few
- simple colors to create a strange yet believable comic-strip
- world.
- </p>
- <p> Nissan Gobi. The charming, quirky Gobi, with corrugated
- truck sides and an aerodynamic passenger capsule, is like a
- minivan mated with an old roadster and a pickup. Its designers--Gerald Hirshberg, Bruce Campbell, Diane Taraskavage--just
- said no to the supposed auto-design laws that cheap vehicles
- have to look generic and trucks must be boxy.
- </p>
- <p> Germaine Monteil's Lightyears. In a field where packaging
- tends to be either kitschy or utilitarian, the firm of Cato Gobe
- Hirst created a bottle for Lightyears wrinkle cream that is
- richly evocative. With its frosted-glass base, sleek phallic
- stem and peachy glow, it suggests both a piece of lab equipment
- and a vanity-table objet, pseudo science made gorgeous.
- </p>
- <p> Ellis Island. Restorations of important old buildings are
- the motherhood-and-apple-pie of architecture, indisputably
- virtuous. But a refurbishing as ambitious as this, with its
- emotionally charged Beaux Arts buildings, is something special.
- The project by Beyer Blinder Belle and Notter Finegold &
- Alexander was meticulous: a 114-ft.-long entrance canopy is
- brand new and just right.
- </p>
- <p> Bright & Associates Headquarters. Franklin D. Israel managed
- to turn the old studio of design demigods Charles and Ray Eames
- into an edgy office for a Venice, Calif., graphics firm. A
- dissonant vision achieved with Eamesian plain materials.
- </p>
- <p> Carnegie Hall Tower. The problem with new skyscrapers is not
- just that they are bad, but that their badness exists at such
- vast size. Cesar Pelli's finely wrought tower, next to the
- eponymous landmark, is a polychrome slab that helps make midtown
- Manhattan's overbuilding almost bearable.
- </p>
- <p> St. Andrew's School Boathouse. For a prep school in
- Delaware, Richard Conway Meyer made an enchanting building, as
- graceful as the sculls inside. A gently sloped steel roof covers
- the business end of the boathouse, and the attached clubhouse,
- with its timber framing and clover-shaped arches, could make one
- yearn to be 16 again.
- </p>
- <p> The Bag Hog. Designed by John Lonczak with Tony Baxter and
- Simon Yan, the Bag Hog is a slab of polyethylene that can be
- shipped efficiently and then formed into a cylinder that
- supports a garbage bag. This is great design of the humblest
- kind: all function, no style.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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