Hello Platformtwo
Here some more input for the first brief:
Platformtwo brief_01
Title : Neighbourhood watch.
Brief:The first brief is about collecting stories of your hood, stories that no one know yet, spying on your neighbourhood, seeing what’s out there, its very much about observation and, making the unknown known, bringing weird and unusual things, places, characters to the surface, bring us your story of your neighbourhood, something that we don’t know yet, be curious and nosy, and tell us a great story of your neighbourhood.
Presentation:verbal + photographic and historical evidence.
We shall meet on Thursday the 8th morning to listen to your story (time to be confirmed)
Listen to the 52 Bus trip story
The official sites: http://www.neighbourhoodwatch.net/
http://www.neighbourhoodwatch.uk.com/
http://www.crimereduction.homeoffice.gov.uk/nbhwatch.htm
http://www.kingston.gov.uk/community_people_and_living/crime/neighbourhood_watch.htm
Get to know some statistic of your area:
On you tube, home made CCTV
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HGoFWbQw8UA
What the American coopers tells us http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NrRVNcy6o0Q
After a rather long-awaited summer-break we are now back at College.
After weeks of speculation we finally have the results of the ballot papers.
This years platformtwo has got 14 students from across the world, with cultural inheritance in England, France, Holland, Greece, Albania, Slovakia, Italy, Iran, Turkey, Switzerland, Sourth Korea and possible many more.
Wellcome to Platformtwo:
Fabien, Josephine, Merel, Georgios, Vahakn, Christopher, Kalliopi, Marc, George, Bethan, Bahbak, So- Hyun, Nina, Clemence
Platformtwo has just grown bigger, Jurgen Bey is joining platformtwo.
Great news.
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We can finally announce the opening of “THE ALLOTMENT”!
We would like to see You on Friday the 9TH of March
@ 8 Egerton Garden Mews, SW3
Start: 19:30
We are Looking forward to see You.
Platformtwo
Design Products Dept.
RCA
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THE ALLOTMENT
“Characterized by a concentration in one place
that is assigned to individual parts of the overall design”
8 EGERTON GARDEN MEWS
LONDON SW3
What is a Manifesto?
In this collaboration workshop between Platformtwo ( Design Products) and Design Without Labels (Communication Art and Design), we’ll discuss the virtues and flaws of the Manifesto and come up with a “contract”.
Platformtwo has built it’s sordid reputation on Direct Action .
We believe that design at Masters level should be less theory, and more about real experience.
To give ourselves a window on the real world, we have negotiated a prime retail space in Knightsbridge, which will become a literal platform from which to engage the public in the products and services of Platformtwo .
This space will become the marketplace from which we will indulge in live testing our products and services. Any profit will be ploughed back into the latform to enhance the educational experience.
Design cannot exist as an activity in itself, therefore Platform two will create a series of situations which will force the designers into unfamiliar real life situations.
This years platformtwo students:
Gemma Holt
Greetje Van Helmond
Mario Stadelmann
Aysenaz Toker
Yuri Suzuki
Simon Denzel
So Hyun Kim
Isabel Costa Lucio
Rodrigo Solorzano
A new year of Design Activity
We will be meeting this afternoon at 16:00/8th floor.
Presentation of Lohar project
Please bring drawings, models, mock-ups.
Dear Platformtwo
we are meeting on Wednesday 15/02
@ 16:00, small seminar room 8th floor
We will be talking about platfform-trip and future projects.
Sunday night in Lagos, Femi Kuti playing at the Shrine club.
The stage reverberates with funky, groovy and danceable music. A trio of supple ladies enters the stage, gyrating their bodies in the most sensual way, to the applause of an exuberant audience.
Born June 1962, in Lagos, the son of legendary Nigerian Afro-Beat pioneer Fela Anikulapo Kuti, Femi is a musical icon and a worthy successor to his father. Nimble footed, humorous on stage but hard-hitting in both his lyrics and talk, Femi has added a new dimension to the polyrhythmic sound in which his father specialized. Through flawless performances he has added the exuberance of young Lagos as well as the sound of American dance music such as house.
He first rose to fame in 1985 when he appeared in place of his father at the Hollywood Bowl after Fela was arrested at Lagos Airport on a dubious fraud charge. Femi delighted the audience with the same strident saxophone style and self-assured stage presence of his father. By 1987, he had formed his own band, the Positive Force, and their debut album “No Cause for Alarm�? was released on Polygram Nigeria. It was an effective blend of soul and jazz with driving percussion and sociopolitical lyrics. He says of his music: “It reflects in my everyday living. I am a stronger believer in love.�?
platformtwo backstage f_kuti_(031).mpeg
one of Nigeria’s foremost sculptors, one of the creators of the workshop “Made in Nigeria”.
Olu Amoda is the founder of Riverside Art and Design Studio, Lagos. He studied art at Auchi Polytechnic, then Bendel State, Nigeria, and in 1983, he majored in sculpture. Since then he has worked as a professional artist. He also teaches sculpture, drawing and modeling at Yaba College of Technology, Lagos. Amoda was once the president of the Lagos Chapter of the Society of Nigerian Artists (SNA). He has won a number of distinguished prizes in art, received numerous residencies, and has exhibited in Nigeria, Germany, Canada and United States.
Our hosts took as to a various scrap yards around the city, each of them almost a city in itself, surely not a place for unusual visitors, but we had a very warm welcome by most of the people working there, and everyone tried to sell us tons of heavy metal sheets, all we where after was a bid of metal wire and some steel profiles.
Design workshop in collaboration with British Council, Yaba College of Technology and Royal College of Art, Platformtwo /Design Products Department.







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The British Council has established new links between the next generation of designers from the UK and Nigeria by inviting six students from UK’s leading post-graduate art and design college, the Royal College of Art, to collaborate with students from Nigeria’s foremost arts college, the Yaba College of Technology, Lagos.
This interdisciplinary workshop that will open at the Yaba College of Technology, Lagos, on Monday 16th through February 8th 2006, will investigate how designs can be based locally but have a global appeal. Using the skills of local artisans such as street welders and the design ingenuity of the students, this workshop aims at raising the importance of design as a commercial business and cultural medium and to strengthen the networks between producers and designers in Nigeria.
Internationally renowned product and furniture designers, Tom Dixon and Martino Gamper, as well as Nigeria’s own sculptor and lecturer, Olu Amoda, will guide the students. In addition to students from Yaba College of Technology, the workshop will involve two of the finalists from the British Council’s International Young Design Entrepreneur of the Year Award (IYDEY) 2005.
The National Gallery of Art, Abuja, Nigeria, and Virgin Atlantic have generously supported this project.
some facts :
http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/ni.html
http://www.ladsoflagos.com/Facts.htm





Population
Nigeria: 130,000,000
Lagos city: 10,013,600 and raising
Government
Parliamentary democracy, not every one agrees about that fact.
Ethnic Groups
Nigeria, which is Africa’s most populous country, is composed of more than 250 ethnic groups; the following are the most populous and politically influential: Hausa and Fulani 29%, Yoruba 21%, Igbo (Ibo) 18%, Ijaw 10%, Kanuri 4%, Ibibio 3.5%, Tiv 2.5%
Languages
English (official), Hausa, Yoruba, Igbo (Ibo), Fulani
Religion
Muslim 50%, Christian 40%, indigenous beliefs 10%
Climate
Average highs and lows for Lagos are 31� C and 23� C in January and 28� C and 23� C in June. Mean annual precipitation at Lagos is about 1,900 millimeters; at Ibadan, only about 140 kilometers north of Lagos, mean annual rainfall drops to around 1,250 millimeters. Moving north from Ibadan, mean annual rainfall in the west is in the range of 1,200 to 1,300 millimeters.
Lagos climate on the other hand is dry and slightly humid with temperature varying between 32 and 35 degrees centigrade.
The Nigerian climate is generally tropical and wet, with well defined wet and dry seasons. Nights are cool and temperatures will drop from 43�C (109�F) in January day, to 4�C (39�F) in the evening. The rainy season is from April to October. Harmattan winds blows across from the Sahara Desert during the dry season.
Imports
machinery, chemicals, transport equipment, manufactured goods, food and live animals
Exports
petroleum and petroleum products 95%, cocoa, rubber
Trading Partners
USA, EU, and Japan
Industries
crude oil, coal, tin, columbite, palm oil, peanuts, cotton, rubber, wood, hides and skins, textiles, cement and other construction materials, food products, footwear, chemicals, fertilizer, printing, ceramics, steel
Geography
Nigeria has borders with Niger to the north, Chad (across Lake Chad) to the northeast, Cameroon to the east and Benin to the west. To the south, the Gulf of Guinea is indented by the Bight of Benin and the Bight of Biafra. The country�s topography and vegetation vary considerably. The coastal region is a low-lying area of lagoons, sandy beaches and mangrove swamps, which merges into an area of rainforest where palm trees grow to over 30m (100ft). From here, the landscape changes to savannah and open woodland, rising to the Central Jos Plateau at 1800m (6000ft). The northern part of the country is desert and semi-desert, marking the southern extent of the Sahara.
provide by: http://www.worldroom.com
After our very inspiring and interesting trip to Jaipur / India, the second group of students left for Lagos / Nigeria.
Once arrived in Nigeria we had a very warm ( 30°) welcome by our hosts: British Council, Yaba College of Technology & Students, Olu Amoda.
Lagos is definitely a characteristic city, not quite easy to but it in words, yet, a big “WHOW”! for now.
This are some of the pople involved and made it possible to organise this workshop:
Anuradha Singh, curator involved in organising the Jaipur Festival, JVF
Ayush Kasliwal, designer and creative director of AKFD (sorry,picture will follow soon)
Chandravijai Singh, Dean of IICD
Tom Dixon, designer, inventor and teacher
Panoi, designer and great ambassator for the Lohar’s
Martino Gamper, designer and tutor
There where more people involved behind the scene, a big thanks to all of you.
IICD Canteen
IICD Library
IICD College
The Indian Institute of Crafts and Design has been established by the Government of Rajasthan as an autonomous institute of excellence for development of the handicrafts sector & industry, with a national mandate and to act as a catalyst in the craft sector.
Presently, the Institute conducts a 4 Year Under-Graduate Diploma Programme and 2 year Post-Graduate in Craft Design, to develop design professionals for craft sector.
http://www.iicdindia.org/