• The 3D printing has been used to redesign the Terrazza Aperol in Milan. It's one of those places that gets a lot of attention, especially with views over Piazza Duomo. They say it's an intervention in design or something like that. Honestly, not sure how much it changes things. Just another spot to grab a drink, you know? Not really feeling the excitement about it.

    #3DPrinting #TerrazzaAperol #Milan #DesignIntervention #Nightlife
    The 3D printing has been used to redesign the Terrazza Aperol in Milan. It's one of those places that gets a lot of attention, especially with views over Piazza Duomo. They say it's an intervention in design or something like that. Honestly, not sure how much it changes things. Just another spot to grab a drink, you know? Not really feeling the excitement about it. #3DPrinting #TerrazzaAperol #Milan #DesignIntervention #Nightlife
    La impresión 3D en el rediseño de la Terrazza Aperol en Milán
    Uno de los lugares emblemáticos de la vida nocturna milanesa ha sido rediseñado gracias a la fabricación aditiva. Se trata de la Terrazza Aperol, con vistas a la Piazza Duomo, que sirve de escenario para una intervención de diseño de…
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  • 20 MOST Affordable Beach Towns in the United States

    Summer is here, and you're probably already packing your calendar with vacation escapes, backyard BBQs, and weekend road trips. Of course, the fan-favorite destination for this hot season is the beach, where the breeze is cool and the water is refreshing. But what if we told you that you didn't have to book an Airbnb or waterfront hotel in a beach town the next time you wanted to take a dip in one of nature's pools? Turns out, a beach house may be more in reach than you thought! Zillow recently pulled some data to identify the 20 most affordable seaside cities where you can make your vacation home dreams a reality.While we're not saying these options will get you a beach house on the cheap, the locations typically offer a range of properties with lower price tags that still give you access to the ocean, as well as all the charm that comes with a seaside locale. Of the top 20, you'll find that Florida dominates the list, with a few other states sprinkled in. Keep reading to see which beach towns have the lowest typical home values, but still all of the sandy perks.For more real estate stories:1Atlantic City, NJFederico ScottoAtlantic City may be best known for its casinos, but the iconic boardwalk along the Atlantic Ocean is a close second. There's plenty to do in this shore town, from visiting the amusement park and eating fresh seafood to spreading out on the sand. Since you're so close to New York City, day trips from either location are extremely easy as well.Typical home value: Learn More2Daytona Beach, FLFlavio Vallenari//Getty ImagesAny NASCAR fan is familiar with Daytona Beach, but did you know that this Northeastern Florida city is also a festival hub? Every year, the city hosts over 60 different art, music, and other cultural festivals, giving residents and tourists alike opportunities to experience new things. Though you could easily spend every day on the beach, there are plenty of other museums, adventures, and opportunities to try out.Typical home value: Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below3Deerfield Beach, FLWiniker:Getty ImagesThe small city of Deerfield Beach is ideal if you want to experience South Florida's beaches without the crowds. Located between Boca Raton and Pompano Beach, the town is known for its fishing pier and abundance of outdoor water activities, like paddle-boarding, surfing, and water skiing. Typical home value: Learn More4Myrtle Beach, SCDale Fornoff:Getty ImagesMyrtle Beach is a seaside locale with 60 miles of sandy beach and 14 unique communities meshed together. It provides plenty of classic beach town activities, such as a fun boardwalk and theme park, and is generally a family-friendly location. There are plenty of things to do and places to explore, from the Waccamaw River to 90 different golf courses. Typical home value: Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below5Hallandale Beach, FLTHEPALMER:Getty ImagesSouth of Fort Lauderdale and north of Miami, Hallandale Beach is home to Gulfstream Park Racing and a handful of public beaches. It's a smaller community that offers a classic beach day if you want to escape the crowds. Typical home value: Learn More6Pinellas Park, FLMatthew Lindahl : 500px:Getty ImagesPart of the St. Petersburg metropolitan area, Pinellas Park has a population of about 53,000 and provides access to a string of beaches along the northwestern coast of Florida. Though small, there is an arts and culture scene in the town that highlights the community's creative DNA. Typical home value: Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below7West Haven, CTRedtea:Getty ImagesLocated on the Long Island Sound, West Haven is an affordable option not far from New York City. This town has the longest stretch of public beaches in the state, where you can swim, sunbathe, fish, and explore. Typical home value: Learn More8Galveston, TXWirestock//Getty ImagesWith over 30 miles of beaches, Galveston is the only Texas seaside city on this list. It's located on the balmy Gulf of Mexico, where there are plenty of museums and art galleries you can visit, along with beaches. The area also has a well-known restaurant scene.Typical home value: Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below9Palm Coast, FLMichael Warren:Getty ImagesParks, museums, beaches—oh, my! Palm Coast is on the Northeast side of Florida and offers plenty of fun. Relax or fish at one of the beaches, then head over to Washington Oaks Gardens State Park for some biking amid the lush gardens before ending your day at the Florida Agricultural Museum. Did we mention that there's also plenty of delicious seafood to be had?Typical home value: Learn More10Largo, FLalex grichenko:Getty ImagesSouth of Clearwater, Largo offers access to beaches and two larger metropolitan areas, perfect for the homeowner who wants to be near the action but not caught up in it. There are multiple parks to visit in the town, and art lovers will appreciate all the shows and performances. Typical home value: Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below11Pompano Beach, FLLagunaticPhoto:Getty ImagesPompano Beach is a hidden gem on the Gold Coast, neighboring Boca Raton, Fort Lauderdale, and Hollywood. The city offers miles of beach with temperate waters from the Gulf Stream, as well as plenty of things to do, like snorkeling, shopping, festivals, and golfing. Typical home value: Learn More12Delray Beach, FLThomas Green:Getty ImagesFor a mix of water activities and a thriving art scene, consider Delray Beach. The arts district is part of what makes this South Florida city so special, and the municipal beach is just the cherry on top. It can definitely get busy on a nice day.Typical home value: Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below13Clearwater, FLJohn Murphy Photography:Getty ImagesIf Clearwater's three miles of white sand beaches aren't enough to entice you, maybe the plethora of activities and events will. Clearwater is part of the Tampa-St. Petersburg metropolitan area, and it has plenty to offer, from the nightly festival at Pier 60 to the Clearwater Marine Aquarium. Typical home value: Learn More14Bradenton, FLDawn Damico:Getty ImagesExplore your love of the beach and historical sites in Bradenton along the Manatee River. For a small city, there's plenty to do, including the Bishop Museum of Science and Nature, the riverwalk, the Manatee Village Historical Park, and multiple beaches.Typical home value: Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below15St. Petersburg, FLJohn Coletti:Getty ImagesOne of the largest cities on this list in terms of population, St. Petersburg is known as the "Sunshine City" and is home to great shops, top-ranked beaches, and a thriving arts district. For those who want both beach and city life, this should be a top contender on your list. You can find multiple museums, like the Dali Museum and a living museum of botanicals and tropical plants at the Sunken Gardens.Typical home value: Learn More16Ormond Beach, FLArt Wager:Getty ImagesGet that small-town feel in Ormond Beach, which is at the northern end of the Daytona Beach area. It's a quieter refuge, though it's not lacking in culture. There are multiple state parks located in this town, along with museums and cultural centers that are good to visit when you're not taking a dip in the Atlantic. Typical home value: Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below17Oakland Park, FLShobeir Ansari:Getty ImagesOakland Park is just north of Fort Lauderdale and has excellent access to the metropolitan area's beaches. Think of this town of around 44,000 people as any other small American town, just with closer access to the Atlantic Ocean. Typical home value: Learn More18Riviera Beach, FLCrystal Bolin Photography:Getty ImagesRiviera Beach is just off the coast of Singer Island, and it's a wonderful location for those who love to bask in the sun and take in all types of water activities. There are multiple parks to explore and plenty of opportunities to see and learn about the marine life that lives in Florida.Typical home value: Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below19West Palm Beach, FLMasao Taira:Getty ImagesThis bustling city might not be the most affordable destination on this list, but it offers a lot for its elevated prices. From exciting nightlife and exceptional culinary options to an exciting art scene, West Palm Beach is a vibrant destination with plenty of beach access. Typical home value: Learn More20Navarre, FLArt Wager:Getty ImagesThis small city in Western Florida, on the Gulf Coast, just an hour and a half from Mobile, Alabama, boasts white sand beaches, clear blue water, and proximity to Santa Rosa Island. It's a tranquil destination with opportunities to learn about marine life at the multiple refuges and conservation centers.Typical home value: Learn More
    #most #affordable #beach #towns #united
    20 MOST Affordable Beach Towns in the United States
    Summer is here, and you're probably already packing your calendar with vacation escapes, backyard BBQs, and weekend road trips. Of course, the fan-favorite destination for this hot season is the beach, where the breeze is cool and the water is refreshing. But what if we told you that you didn't have to book an Airbnb or waterfront hotel in a beach town the next time you wanted to take a dip in one of nature's pools? Turns out, a beach house may be more in reach than you thought! Zillow recently pulled some data to identify the 20 most affordable seaside cities where you can make your vacation home dreams a reality.While we're not saying these options will get you a beach house on the cheap, the locations typically offer a range of properties with lower price tags that still give you access to the ocean, as well as all the charm that comes with a seaside locale. Of the top 20, you'll find that Florida dominates the list, with a few other states sprinkled in. Keep reading to see which beach towns have the lowest typical home values, but still all of the sandy perks.For more real estate stories:1Atlantic City, NJFederico ScottoAtlantic City may be best known for its casinos, but the iconic boardwalk along the Atlantic Ocean is a close second. There's plenty to do in this shore town, from visiting the amusement park and eating fresh seafood to spreading out on the sand. Since you're so close to New York City, day trips from either location are extremely easy as well.Typical home value: Learn More2Daytona Beach, FLFlavio Vallenari//Getty ImagesAny NASCAR fan is familiar with Daytona Beach, but did you know that this Northeastern Florida city is also a festival hub? Every year, the city hosts over 60 different art, music, and other cultural festivals, giving residents and tourists alike opportunities to experience new things. Though you could easily spend every day on the beach, there are plenty of other museums, adventures, and opportunities to try out.Typical home value: Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below3Deerfield Beach, FLWiniker:Getty ImagesThe small city of Deerfield Beach is ideal if you want to experience South Florida's beaches without the crowds. Located between Boca Raton and Pompano Beach, the town is known for its fishing pier and abundance of outdoor water activities, like paddle-boarding, surfing, and water skiing. Typical home value: Learn More4Myrtle Beach, SCDale Fornoff:Getty ImagesMyrtle Beach is a seaside locale with 60 miles of sandy beach and 14 unique communities meshed together. It provides plenty of classic beach town activities, such as a fun boardwalk and theme park, and is generally a family-friendly location. There are plenty of things to do and places to explore, from the Waccamaw River to 90 different golf courses. Typical home value: Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below5Hallandale Beach, FLTHEPALMER:Getty ImagesSouth of Fort Lauderdale and north of Miami, Hallandale Beach is home to Gulfstream Park Racing and a handful of public beaches. It's a smaller community that offers a classic beach day if you want to escape the crowds. Typical home value: Learn More6Pinellas Park, FLMatthew Lindahl : 500px:Getty ImagesPart of the St. Petersburg metropolitan area, Pinellas Park has a population of about 53,000 and provides access to a string of beaches along the northwestern coast of Florida. Though small, there is an arts and culture scene in the town that highlights the community's creative DNA. Typical home value: Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below7West Haven, CTRedtea:Getty ImagesLocated on the Long Island Sound, West Haven is an affordable option not far from New York City. This town has the longest stretch of public beaches in the state, where you can swim, sunbathe, fish, and explore. Typical home value: Learn More8Galveston, TXWirestock//Getty ImagesWith over 30 miles of beaches, Galveston is the only Texas seaside city on this list. It's located on the balmy Gulf of Mexico, where there are plenty of museums and art galleries you can visit, along with beaches. The area also has a well-known restaurant scene.Typical home value: Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below9Palm Coast, FLMichael Warren:Getty ImagesParks, museums, beaches—oh, my! Palm Coast is on the Northeast side of Florida and offers plenty of fun. Relax or fish at one of the beaches, then head over to Washington Oaks Gardens State Park for some biking amid the lush gardens before ending your day at the Florida Agricultural Museum. Did we mention that there's also plenty of delicious seafood to be had?Typical home value: Learn More10Largo, FLalex grichenko:Getty ImagesSouth of Clearwater, Largo offers access to beaches and two larger metropolitan areas, perfect for the homeowner who wants to be near the action but not caught up in it. There are multiple parks to visit in the town, and art lovers will appreciate all the shows and performances. Typical home value: Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below11Pompano Beach, FLLagunaticPhoto:Getty ImagesPompano Beach is a hidden gem on the Gold Coast, neighboring Boca Raton, Fort Lauderdale, and Hollywood. The city offers miles of beach with temperate waters from the Gulf Stream, as well as plenty of things to do, like snorkeling, shopping, festivals, and golfing. Typical home value: Learn More12Delray Beach, FLThomas Green:Getty ImagesFor a mix of water activities and a thriving art scene, consider Delray Beach. The arts district is part of what makes this South Florida city so special, and the municipal beach is just the cherry on top. It can definitely get busy on a nice day.Typical home value: Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below13Clearwater, FLJohn Murphy Photography:Getty ImagesIf Clearwater's three miles of white sand beaches aren't enough to entice you, maybe the plethora of activities and events will. Clearwater is part of the Tampa-St. Petersburg metropolitan area, and it has plenty to offer, from the nightly festival at Pier 60 to the Clearwater Marine Aquarium. Typical home value: Learn More14Bradenton, FLDawn Damico:Getty ImagesExplore your love of the beach and historical sites in Bradenton along the Manatee River. For a small city, there's plenty to do, including the Bishop Museum of Science and Nature, the riverwalk, the Manatee Village Historical Park, and multiple beaches.Typical home value: Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below15St. Petersburg, FLJohn Coletti:Getty ImagesOne of the largest cities on this list in terms of population, St. Petersburg is known as the "Sunshine City" and is home to great shops, top-ranked beaches, and a thriving arts district. For those who want both beach and city life, this should be a top contender on your list. You can find multiple museums, like the Dali Museum and a living museum of botanicals and tropical plants at the Sunken Gardens.Typical home value: Learn More16Ormond Beach, FLArt Wager:Getty ImagesGet that small-town feel in Ormond Beach, which is at the northern end of the Daytona Beach area. It's a quieter refuge, though it's not lacking in culture. There are multiple state parks located in this town, along with museums and cultural centers that are good to visit when you're not taking a dip in the Atlantic. Typical home value: Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below17Oakland Park, FLShobeir Ansari:Getty ImagesOakland Park is just north of Fort Lauderdale and has excellent access to the metropolitan area's beaches. Think of this town of around 44,000 people as any other small American town, just with closer access to the Atlantic Ocean. Typical home value: Learn More18Riviera Beach, FLCrystal Bolin Photography:Getty ImagesRiviera Beach is just off the coast of Singer Island, and it's a wonderful location for those who love to bask in the sun and take in all types of water activities. There are multiple parks to explore and plenty of opportunities to see and learn about the marine life that lives in Florida.Typical home value: Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below19West Palm Beach, FLMasao Taira:Getty ImagesThis bustling city might not be the most affordable destination on this list, but it offers a lot for its elevated prices. From exciting nightlife and exceptional culinary options to an exciting art scene, West Palm Beach is a vibrant destination with plenty of beach access. Typical home value: Learn More20Navarre, FLArt Wager:Getty ImagesThis small city in Western Florida, on the Gulf Coast, just an hour and a half from Mobile, Alabama, boasts white sand beaches, clear blue water, and proximity to Santa Rosa Island. It's a tranquil destination with opportunities to learn about marine life at the multiple refuges and conservation centers.Typical home value: Learn More #most #affordable #beach #towns #united
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    20 MOST Affordable Beach Towns in the United States
    Summer is here, and you're probably already packing your calendar with vacation escapes, backyard BBQs, and weekend road trips. Of course, the fan-favorite destination for this hot season is the beach, where the breeze is cool and the water is refreshing. But what if we told you that you didn't have to book an Airbnb or waterfront hotel in a beach town the next time you wanted to take a dip in one of nature's pools? Turns out, a beach house may be more in reach than you thought! Zillow recently pulled some data to identify the 20 most affordable seaside cities where you can make your vacation home dreams a reality.While we're not saying these options will get you a beach house on the cheap, the locations typically offer a range of properties with lower price tags that still give you access to the ocean, as well as all the charm that comes with a seaside locale (think Mom and Pop ice cream shops, quaint shopping, and more). Of the top 20, you'll find that Florida dominates the list, with a few other states sprinkled in. Keep reading to see which beach towns have the lowest typical home values, but still all of the sandy perks.For more real estate stories:1Atlantic City, NJFederico ScottoAtlantic City may be best known for its casinos, but the iconic boardwalk along the Atlantic Ocean is a close second. There's plenty to do in this shore town, from visiting the amusement park and eating fresh seafood to spreading out on the sand. Since you're so close to New York City, day trips from either location are extremely easy as well.Typical home value: $215,336Learn More2Daytona Beach, FLFlavio Vallenari//Getty ImagesAny NASCAR fan is familiar with Daytona Beach, but did you know that this Northeastern Florida city is also a festival hub? Every year, the city hosts over 60 different art, music, and other cultural festivals, giving residents and tourists alike opportunities to experience new things. Though you could easily spend every day on the beach, there are plenty of other museums, adventures, and opportunities to try out.Typical home value: $251,750Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below3Deerfield Beach, FLWiniker:Getty ImagesThe small city of Deerfield Beach is ideal if you want to experience South Florida's beaches without the crowds. Located between Boca Raton and Pompano Beach, the town is known for its fishing pier and abundance of outdoor water activities, like paddle-boarding, surfing, and water skiing. Typical home value: Learn More4Myrtle Beach, SCDale Fornoff:Getty ImagesMyrtle Beach is a seaside locale with 60 miles of sandy beach and 14 unique communities meshed together. It provides plenty of classic beach town activities, such as a fun boardwalk and theme park, and is generally a family-friendly location. There are plenty of things to do and places to explore, from the Waccamaw River to 90 different golf courses. Typical home value: $300,720Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below5Hallandale Beach, FLTHEPALMER:Getty ImagesSouth of Fort Lauderdale and north of Miami, Hallandale Beach is home to Gulfstream Park Racing and a handful of public beaches. It's a smaller community that offers a classic beach day if you want to escape the crowds. Typical home value: $301,130Learn More6Pinellas Park, FLMatthew Lindahl : 500px:Getty ImagesPart of the St. Petersburg metropolitan area, Pinellas Park has a population of about 53,000 and provides access to a string of beaches along the northwestern coast of Florida. Though small, there is an arts and culture scene in the town that highlights the community's creative DNA. Typical home value: $314,991Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below7West Haven, CTRedtea:Getty ImagesLocated on the Long Island Sound, West Haven is an affordable option not far from New York City. This town has the longest stretch of public beaches in the state, where you can swim, sunbathe, fish, and explore. Typical home value: $326,043Learn More8Galveston, TXWirestock//Getty ImagesWith over 30 miles of beaches, Galveston is the only Texas seaside city on this list. It's located on the balmy Gulf of Mexico, where there are plenty of museums and art galleries you can visit, along with beaches. The area also has a well-known restaurant scene.Typical home value: $333,127Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below9Palm Coast, FLMichael Warren:Getty ImagesParks, museums, beaches—oh, my! Palm Coast is on the Northeast side of Florida and offers plenty of fun. Relax or fish at one of the beaches, then head over to Washington Oaks Gardens State Park for some biking amid the lush gardens before ending your day at the Florida Agricultural Museum. Did we mention that there's also plenty of delicious seafood to be had?Typical home value: $351,404Learn More10Largo, FLalex grichenko:Getty ImagesSouth of Clearwater, Largo offers access to beaches and two larger metropolitan areas, perfect for the homeowner who wants to be near the action but not caught up in it. There are multiple parks to visit in the town, and art lovers will appreciate all the shows and performances. Typical home value: $353,576Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below11Pompano Beach, FLLagunaticPhoto:Getty ImagesPompano Beach is a hidden gem on the Gold Coast, neighboring Boca Raton, Fort Lauderdale, and Hollywood. The city offers miles of beach with temperate waters from the Gulf Stream, as well as plenty of things to do, like snorkeling, shopping, festivals, and golfing. Typical home value: $356,795Learn More12Delray Beach, FLThomas Green:Getty ImagesFor a mix of water activities and a thriving art scene, consider Delray Beach. The arts district is part of what makes this South Florida city so special, and the municipal beach is just the cherry on top. It can definitely get busy on a nice day.Typical home value: $359,963Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below13Clearwater, FLJohn Murphy Photography:Getty ImagesIf Clearwater's three miles of white sand beaches aren't enough to entice you, maybe the plethora of activities and events will. Clearwater is part of the Tampa-St. Petersburg metropolitan area, and it has plenty to offer, from the nightly festival at Pier 60 to the Clearwater Marine Aquarium. Typical home value: $362,300Learn More14Bradenton, FLDawn Damico:Getty ImagesExplore your love of the beach and historical sites in Bradenton along the Manatee River. For a small city, there's plenty to do, including the Bishop Museum of Science and Nature, the riverwalk, the Manatee Village Historical Park, and multiple beaches.Typical home value: $370,091Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below15St. Petersburg, FLJohn Coletti:Getty ImagesOne of the largest cities on this list in terms of population, St. Petersburg is known as the "Sunshine City" and is home to great shops, top-ranked beaches, and a thriving arts district. For those who want both beach and city life, this should be a top contender on your list. You can find multiple museums, like the Dali Museum and a living museum of botanicals and tropical plants at the Sunken Gardens.Typical home value: $372,035Learn More16Ormond Beach, FLArt Wager:Getty ImagesGet that small-town feel in Ormond Beach, which is at the northern end of the Daytona Beach area. It's a quieter refuge, though it's not lacking in culture. There are multiple state parks located in this town, along with museums and cultural centers that are good to visit when you're not taking a dip in the Atlantic. Typical home value: $379,800Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below17Oakland Park, FLShobeir Ansari:Getty ImagesOakland Park is just north of Fort Lauderdale and has excellent access to the metropolitan area's beaches. Think of this town of around 44,000 people as any other small American town, just with closer access to the Atlantic Ocean. Typical home value: $381,610Learn More18Riviera Beach, FLCrystal Bolin Photography:Getty ImagesRiviera Beach is just off the coast of Singer Island, and it's a wonderful location for those who love to bask in the sun and take in all types of water activities. There are multiple parks to explore and plenty of opportunities to see and learn about the marine life that lives in Florida.Typical home value: $397,829Learn MoreAdvertisement - Continue Reading Below19West Palm Beach, FLMasao Taira:Getty ImagesThis bustling city might not be the most affordable destination on this list, but it offers a lot for its elevated prices. From exciting nightlife and exceptional culinary options to an exciting art scene, West Palm Beach is a vibrant destination with plenty of beach access. Typical home value: $403,731Learn More20Navarre, FLArt Wager:Getty ImagesThis small city in Western Florida, on the Gulf Coast, just an hour and a half from Mobile, Alabama, boasts white sand beaches, clear blue water, and proximity to Santa Rosa Island. It's a tranquil destination with opportunities to learn about marine life at the multiple refuges and conservation centers.Typical home value: $415,063Learn More
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  • Real-world map data is helping make better games about farms and transportation

    I’m feeling a strange sense of pressure as I set up my first bus route in City Bus Manager. I want to get things right for the public transportation users of this city, probably because it’s the city I actually live in. City Bus Manager uses OpenStreetMapdata to populate its maps, so I can see all the familiar streets and points of interest laid out in front of me. These are my neighbors, who, like me, want an efficient transit service. I want to be able to provide it to them — even if only in a simulation.City Bus Manager is part of a small group of management sims that are using OSM’s community-generated database to make the whole world their game setting. Other examples include Global Farmer, NIMBY Rails, and Logistical: Earth. In these games, players can build farms, railways, or delivery networks all over the globe, using data about real fields, settlements, and infrastructure to inform their decisions.When the idea of using OSM was first raised at PeDePe, the studio behind City Bus Manager, “we had no idea if it would be technically feasible,” says Niklas Polster, the studio’s co-founder. But once established, the license gave them access to an entire world of streets, buildings, and even real bus stops. And these do more than just form the game’s world. They’re also used for gameplay elements like simulating passenger behavior. “Schools generate traffic in the mornings on weekdays, while nightlife areas such as bars and clubs tend to attract more passengers in the evenings on weekends,” ” Polster says.Typically, Polster says, people are drawn to playing City Bus Manager in their local areas.That personal connection appears almost hardwired into people, says Thorsten Feldmann, CEO of Global Farmer developer Thera Bytes. When they showcased the game at Gamescom in 2024, “every single booth visitor” wanted to input their own postal code and look at their own house.Global Farmer. Image: Thera BytesThere’s a specific fantasy about being able to transform a space you know so well, Feldmann says. In addition to your own home or town, the marketing for Global Farmer suggests using famous tourist locations, such as Buckingham Palace, as the beginning of your new agricultural life. “own stories around those places can be even more impactful than in purely fictional environments,” Feldmann says.There is something inherently fun about being in control of a place you see every day or one that is deeply iconic. In particular, tearing down a perfectly manicured gated garden from which the British royal family takes £510 million per year and turning it into land to grow food for a country where 4.5 million children live in poverty might not be a one-to-one political solution, but it is emotionally compelling.“We’ve heard stories of players who became interested in public transport as a career thanks to the game.”The quality — or lack thereof — of public transportation is another key political topic where I live. The local buses are currently in the process of being nationalized again after what South Yorkshire Mayor Oliver Coppard calls a “failed experiment” in privatization. Maybe that’s why, even though these might just be pixels on a screen, I want to do it right. That’s a feeling many players seem to experience. “Our Discord community is full of players who are passionate about public transport,” Polster says. “We’ve heard stories of players who became interested in public transport as a career thanks to the game.”Of course, game developers using OSM data are still making games, rather than exact simulations. The real world is not always a well-balanced game design space. “In smaller towns and villages, routes can be unprofitable with realistic numbers,” Polster says. City Bus Manager compensates for this by giving players more financial support, which is a straightforward and useful bit of game design. But when it comes to treating the games as direct representations of the world, it elides some complexity. For example, according to Polster, some players have reached out to their local transportation agencies with data they’ve gathered from playing in their local areas — despite the fact that the game is not actually designed as a faithful recreation of the real world, even if its map is.NIMBY Rails. Image: Weird and WryAnother challenge is that OSM data isn’t always fully reliable. Polster explains that there can be errors or missing data that break very specific areas in the game, requiring PeDePe to manually find the issues and fix them. But OSM is also a volunteer-run program, meaning players can correct the data at the source. “Many of our players contribute directly to OpenStreetMap,” if they find errors in their local area, Polster says, which improves the dataset for everybody, no matter what they’re using it for.Density of data is also a particular issue for the Global Farmer developers, who found that OSM has a lot more information about roads than field systems. There are plenty of areas where individual field boundaries aren’t mapped, making “total grey areas where gameplay actually couldn’t happen.” The developers compensated for this by making a map editor, where players can copy satellite images from other sources to correct the data, but it means that those who don’t want to build their own maps are limited to the places where OSM has detailed data or where other players have shared their creations.Management sims have often reached for a sense of realism, and OSM data is a useful tool in that toolbox. It also allows players to control environments they know well and can connect with. But it is not a perfect recreation of the world, and even if it was, that isn’t always what games need. According to Feldmann, navigating these factors “can be very frustrating.”But, just like players, developers are drawn to the idea of blurring the lines between places they know and places they simulate. “It is also super rewarding whenever you manage to find a solution and get great results that are connected to the real world,” Feldmann says.See More:
    #realworld #map #data #helping #make
    Real-world map data is helping make better games about farms and transportation
    I’m feeling a strange sense of pressure as I set up my first bus route in City Bus Manager. I want to get things right for the public transportation users of this city, probably because it’s the city I actually live in. City Bus Manager uses OpenStreetMapdata to populate its maps, so I can see all the familiar streets and points of interest laid out in front of me. These are my neighbors, who, like me, want an efficient transit service. I want to be able to provide it to them — even if only in a simulation.City Bus Manager is part of a small group of management sims that are using OSM’s community-generated database to make the whole world their game setting. Other examples include Global Farmer, NIMBY Rails, and Logistical: Earth. In these games, players can build farms, railways, or delivery networks all over the globe, using data about real fields, settlements, and infrastructure to inform their decisions.When the idea of using OSM was first raised at PeDePe, the studio behind City Bus Manager, “we had no idea if it would be technically feasible,” says Niklas Polster, the studio’s co-founder. But once established, the license gave them access to an entire world of streets, buildings, and even real bus stops. And these do more than just form the game’s world. They’re also used for gameplay elements like simulating passenger behavior. “Schools generate traffic in the mornings on weekdays, while nightlife areas such as bars and clubs tend to attract more passengers in the evenings on weekends,” ” Polster says.Typically, Polster says, people are drawn to playing City Bus Manager in their local areas.That personal connection appears almost hardwired into people, says Thorsten Feldmann, CEO of Global Farmer developer Thera Bytes. When they showcased the game at Gamescom in 2024, “every single booth visitor” wanted to input their own postal code and look at their own house.Global Farmer. Image: Thera BytesThere’s a specific fantasy about being able to transform a space you know so well, Feldmann says. In addition to your own home or town, the marketing for Global Farmer suggests using famous tourist locations, such as Buckingham Palace, as the beginning of your new agricultural life. “own stories around those places can be even more impactful than in purely fictional environments,” Feldmann says.There is something inherently fun about being in control of a place you see every day or one that is deeply iconic. In particular, tearing down a perfectly manicured gated garden from which the British royal family takes £510 million per year and turning it into land to grow food for a country where 4.5 million children live in poverty might not be a one-to-one political solution, but it is emotionally compelling.“We’ve heard stories of players who became interested in public transport as a career thanks to the game.”The quality — or lack thereof — of public transportation is another key political topic where I live. The local buses are currently in the process of being nationalized again after what South Yorkshire Mayor Oliver Coppard calls a “failed experiment” in privatization. Maybe that’s why, even though these might just be pixels on a screen, I want to do it right. That’s a feeling many players seem to experience. “Our Discord community is full of players who are passionate about public transport,” Polster says. “We’ve heard stories of players who became interested in public transport as a career thanks to the game.”Of course, game developers using OSM data are still making games, rather than exact simulations. The real world is not always a well-balanced game design space. “In smaller towns and villages, routes can be unprofitable with realistic numbers,” Polster says. City Bus Manager compensates for this by giving players more financial support, which is a straightforward and useful bit of game design. But when it comes to treating the games as direct representations of the world, it elides some complexity. For example, according to Polster, some players have reached out to their local transportation agencies with data they’ve gathered from playing in their local areas — despite the fact that the game is not actually designed as a faithful recreation of the real world, even if its map is.NIMBY Rails. Image: Weird and WryAnother challenge is that OSM data isn’t always fully reliable. Polster explains that there can be errors or missing data that break very specific areas in the game, requiring PeDePe to manually find the issues and fix them. But OSM is also a volunteer-run program, meaning players can correct the data at the source. “Many of our players contribute directly to OpenStreetMap,” if they find errors in their local area, Polster says, which improves the dataset for everybody, no matter what they’re using it for.Density of data is also a particular issue for the Global Farmer developers, who found that OSM has a lot more information about roads than field systems. There are plenty of areas where individual field boundaries aren’t mapped, making “total grey areas where gameplay actually couldn’t happen.” The developers compensated for this by making a map editor, where players can copy satellite images from other sources to correct the data, but it means that those who don’t want to build their own maps are limited to the places where OSM has detailed data or where other players have shared their creations.Management sims have often reached for a sense of realism, and OSM data is a useful tool in that toolbox. It also allows players to control environments they know well and can connect with. But it is not a perfect recreation of the world, and even if it was, that isn’t always what games need. According to Feldmann, navigating these factors “can be very frustrating.”But, just like players, developers are drawn to the idea of blurring the lines between places they know and places they simulate. “It is also super rewarding whenever you manage to find a solution and get great results that are connected to the real world,” Feldmann says.See More: #realworld #map #data #helping #make
    WWW.THEVERGE.COM
    Real-world map data is helping make better games about farms and transportation
    I’m feeling a strange sense of pressure as I set up my first bus route in City Bus Manager. I want to get things right for the public transportation users of this city, probably because it’s the city I actually live in. City Bus Manager uses OpenStreetMap (OSM) data to populate its maps, so I can see all the familiar streets and points of interest laid out in front of me. These are my neighbors, who, like me, want an efficient transit service. I want to be able to provide it to them — even if only in a simulation.City Bus Manager is part of a small group of management sims that are using OSM’s community-generated database to make the whole world their game setting. Other examples include Global Farmer, NIMBY Rails, and Logistical: Earth. In these games, players can build farms, railways, or delivery networks all over the globe, using data about real fields, settlements, and infrastructure to inform their decisions.When the idea of using OSM was first raised at PeDePe, the studio behind City Bus Manager, “we had no idea if it would be technically feasible,” says Niklas Polster, the studio’s co-founder. But once established, the license gave them access to an entire world of streets, buildings, and even real bus stops. And these do more than just form the game’s world. They’re also used for gameplay elements like simulating passenger behavior. “Schools generate traffic in the mornings on weekdays, while nightlife areas such as bars and clubs tend to attract more passengers in the evenings on weekends,” ” Polster says.Typically, Polster says, people are drawn to playing City Bus Manager in their local areas. (This seems to be confirmed by looking at YouTube playthroughs of the game, where creators often begin by saying they’re going to dive into their own city or town.) That personal connection appears almost hardwired into people, says Thorsten Feldmann, CEO of Global Farmer developer Thera Bytes. When they showcased the game at Gamescom in 2024, “every single booth visitor” wanted to input their own postal code and look at their own house.Global Farmer. Image: Thera BytesThere’s a specific fantasy about being able to transform a space you know so well, Feldmann says. In addition to your own home or town, the marketing for Global Farmer suggests using famous tourist locations, such as Buckingham Palace, as the beginning of your new agricultural life. “[Players creating their] own stories around those places can be even more impactful than in purely fictional environments,” Feldmann says.There is something inherently fun about being in control of a place you see every day or one that is deeply iconic. In particular, tearing down a perfectly manicured gated garden from which the British royal family takes £510 million per year and turning it into land to grow food for a country where 4.5 million children live in poverty might not be a one-to-one political solution, but it is emotionally compelling.“We’ve heard stories of players who became interested in public transport as a career thanks to the game.”The quality — or lack thereof — of public transportation is another key political topic where I live. The local buses are currently in the process of being nationalized again after what South Yorkshire Mayor Oliver Coppard calls a “failed experiment” in privatization. Maybe that’s why, even though these might just be pixels on a screen, I want to do it right. That’s a feeling many players seem to experience. “Our Discord community is full of players who are passionate about public transport,” Polster says. “We’ve heard stories of players who became interested in public transport as a career thanks to the game.”Of course, game developers using OSM data are still making games, rather than exact simulations. The real world is not always a well-balanced game design space. “In smaller towns and villages, routes can be unprofitable with realistic numbers,” Polster says. City Bus Manager compensates for this by giving players more financial support, which is a straightforward and useful bit of game design. But when it comes to treating the games as direct representations of the world, it elides some complexity. For example, according to Polster, some players have reached out to their local transportation agencies with data they’ve gathered from playing in their local areas — despite the fact that the game is not actually designed as a faithful recreation of the real world, even if its map is.NIMBY Rails. Image: Weird and WryAnother challenge is that OSM data isn’t always fully reliable. Polster explains that there can be errors or missing data that break very specific areas in the game, requiring PeDePe to manually find the issues and fix them. But OSM is also a volunteer-run program, meaning players can correct the data at the source. “Many of our players contribute directly to OpenStreetMap,” if they find errors in their local area, Polster says, which improves the dataset for everybody, no matter what they’re using it for.Density of data is also a particular issue for the Global Farmer developers, who found that OSM has a lot more information about roads than field systems. There are plenty of areas where individual field boundaries aren’t mapped, making “total grey areas where gameplay actually couldn’t happen.” The developers compensated for this by making a map editor, where players can copy satellite images from other sources to correct the data, but it means that those who don’t want to build their own maps are limited to the places where OSM has detailed data or where other players have shared their creations.Management sims have often reached for a sense of realism, and OSM data is a useful tool in that toolbox. It also allows players to control environments they know well and can connect with. But it is not a perfect recreation of the world, and even if it was, that isn’t always what games need. According to Feldmann, navigating these factors “can be very frustrating.”But, just like players, developers are drawn to the idea of blurring the lines between places they know and places they simulate. “It is also super rewarding whenever you manage to find a solution and get great results that are connected to the real world,” Feldmann says.See More:
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  • LGBTQ+ nightlife is going back to its counter-cultural roots

    Queerness and nightlife go hand in hand. Out of the mainstream. Underground and counter-cultural. Whether it’s the location, venue, organisers or crowd, they are always outside the norm. 
    Some, like new lesbian bar La Camionera in Hackney, east London, have been designed, built and crafted by queer hands – the same ones which will soon be shaking, stirring and drinking negronis on a brushed aluminium countertop, or raising a glass in the purpose-built seating areas.
    Source: Rachel FerrimanLa Camionera
    The reopening of the quietly elegant La Camionerafollows a months-long conversion of a temporary space led by its trans owner and a team of queer architects, contractors and trades. It is unique and stylish.  Advertisement

    But that’s not the only reason this tailored LGBTQ+ space stands out. Its mere existence sits against a background of queer venue closures because of an unholy trinity of rising costs, licensing issues and safety concerns. London, to take one city, has lost half of these safe spaces since 2006.
    Waves of redevelopment and gentrification have had their impact, too. One of the most famous victims was the wildly beloved Joiners Arms pub in Hackney Road in 2015. Never forgotten, attempts continue to resurrect this institution somewhere else in London’s East End a decade on.
    But can La Camionera pave the way for a design-led renaissance of after-hours ‘queerness’? One thing is for sure, there is a growing queer movement – architects included – to create safe, accessible LGBTQ+ spaces and define what that might look like.
    We’re going out, to find out.
    The state of play
    The Night Time Industries Associationrecently reported that 37 per cent of all night clubs across the UK have permanently shut since March 2020. That’s an average of three clubs a week, or 150 a year.Advertisement

    LGBTQ+ venues make up a considerable chunk of this. In the capital, between 2006 and 2022, Greater London Authority numbers show that 75 bars, clubs and LGBTQ+ pubs shut down – sometimes forever. 
    The list keeps growing. In the past 18 months, G-A-Y Late in Soho and The Glory in Haggerston have closed. Meanwhile, a third LGBTQ+ safe space, Bethnal Green Working Men’s Club, has been fighting closure on and off for years – though it seems the east London venue may finally have had a late reprieve. 
    Venue closures are happening elsewhere in the UK, too, with Birmingham losing the Village Inn, Glasgow losing Bonjour and Sheffield losing the Queer Junction nightclub. 
    Based on the current rate of club closures, the NTIA warns the UK could have no nightclubs of any kind by 2030. The pro-nighttime body blames the collapse partly on the long-term impact of the Covid pandemic. Once closed down and locked up, these unique spaces rarely re-emerge, eyed up by developers for larger gain. 
    And, while the NTIA data does not explain how many of these closures are LGBTQ+, the community is among the hardest-hit because queerness and nightlife are so intertwined. Or, as Olimpia Burchiellaro, a shareholder of the Friends of The Joiners Arms campaign, puts it: ‘Nighttime is queer time’. 
    A call toArms
    While The Joiners Arms, where reportedlyAlexander McQueen used to hang out, became one of the first LGBTQ+ venues to get protection in the planning system because of the sexual orientation of its users back in 2017, no on-site replacement has yet popped up on Hackney Road.
    Tower Hamlets Council had imposed a planning condition requiring any new development on The Joiners Arms site to include an LGBTQ+ venue. Developer Regal Homes had agreed to it. However, the proposed scheme that forced the closure has been delayed. No development, no new venue. 
    Burchiellaro tells the AJ that The Joiners Arms shows that LGBTQ+ spaces often act as ‘canaries in the coalmine’; a bellwether of the redevelopment cycle and of the state of the nighttime economy more generally. With little planning protection, they can be easily lost because they are often perceived as ‘unproductive’ uses in buildings ripe for replacement.
    Source: Friends of The Joiners ArmsFriends of The Joiners Arms protest outside the former pub
    ‘Gentrification and redevelopment are making it more and more difficult for communities who are not solely focused on profit, like queer spaces, to exist,’ argues Burchiellaro. ‘And, although queer clubs and bars have always been businesses, they’ve always been so much more than that.’
    In the meantime, the Friends of  The Joiners Arms campaign has put on ‘an itinerant, moving club night’ at other east London venues as an act of resistance against anti-LGBTQ+ gentrification and the demise of LGBTQ+ nightlife in the capital, according to Aska Welford, an architectural worker formerly with Karakusevic Carson Architects. Welford, who is leading on co-design for a future permanent home for The Joiners Arms campaign, adds: ‘Even without the physical space, without a permanent, fixed space, queer people continue to exist and have a good time and be together.’
    Safe and sound
    In Edinburgh, GRAS architect Kirsty Watt has also resorted to moving club nights, dubbed ‘Femmergy’, that turn the city’s historic urban fabric – including most recently a former biscuit factory – into a playground for femme-presenting members of the LGBTQ+ community, including trans people and afab women. Watt says: ‘In Edinburgh the queer nightlife scene particularly focused around cis gay men and so women, non-binary and trans people weren’t necessarily welcome in those spaces and that was the point of it, because there wasn’t really a space at all.’
    Source: Kirsty WattFemmergy club night
    While Femmergy has difficulties finding Edinburgh venues with level access and accessible toilets, the club nights have provided a safe space for people ‘to be inherently themselves and represent themselves in a way that they want to while still feeling safe’, says Watt. 
    Both accessibility and safety are central to Femmergy, and are what makes it queer, she tells the AJ, ‘because people need to feel like they have a representation within their urban space’. However, she admits that having level access and accessible toilets have ‘limited us in terms of what venues we can work with, particularly in Edinburgh, because so many of the buildings are historic’.
    Putting the pop in pop-up
    So, if permanent dedicated spaces don’t always exist, what about bringing the nuts-and-bolts of a party to the people instead? This is the concept behind the Mobile Dyke Bar, a travelling lesbian disco started by former Royal Academy Interior design student Lucy Nurnberg and her right-hand woman, Ali Wagner, as part of a wider project dubbed Uhaul Dyke Rescue, a series of design-led club nights. The Mobile Dyke Bar is made of prefabricated parts which ‘slot’ into rental vans, which Nurnberg suggests is a tongue-in-cheek response to hyper-masculine removal van culture as much as it is a declaration of space for lesbians when there is barely any. 
    Its next stop is Mighty Hoopla, a pop festival in south London, later this month – the Mobile Dyke Bar’s second outing at the LGBTQ+ friendly event. 
    Source: Courteney FrisbyThe Mobile Dyke Bar at Mighty Hoopla in 2024
    ‘The idea was that this would be a friendly space, but also about taking space for ourselves and being like, “Look, we need a bit of a dedicated corner here”,’ explains Nurnberg, whose Uhaul Dyke Rescue service was a reaction to ‘queer spaces in London generally declining, especially lesbian spaces’.
    Nurnberg adds that her interior design course informed Uhaul’s philosophy, ‘which is a bit secret and underground’ and had to be done on the cheap. It also looks at temporary structures as queer structures. 
    ‘We had a scaffold structure on the dance floor for our first night because I know that dykes love to flex muscle,’ Nurnberg explains, ‘But I also wanted to make it for anybody more femme presenting, and for anybody wanting to look a bit sexy, so we put a swing on the structure and people loved it.’
    Why architects should design the night
    CAKE, a Dalston, east London-based practice, which was behind the Agnes stage at Rally festival in south London last year, has experience on an even bigger scale of delivering for a queer crowd. 
    The Layher scaffolding and translucent fibreglass-clad structure was designed to flip to become ‘The Strap’ at Body Movements – a queer festival the following day. That’s when the versatility of the modular structure’s raised platforms, floating walls, and one central dance floor all came into action – bringing the audience, artist and stage together. ‘For both days, depending on the music, it was a completely different environment,’ says CAKE architect Emiliano Zavala. ‘At  Body Movements people were dancing up on terraces and the whole thing was inhabited, and for Rally, the crowd was low and spread out, with the stage a kind of undercroft. The difference was really interesting.’
    Source: Rory GaylorAgnes by CAKE Architecture
    Why did CAKE take on the challenge? Hugh Scott Moncrieff, creative director, says it ‘wasn’t the idea of making money’ but the opportunity to make creative architecture that reflects music, rhythm and sound, as well as context.
    Agnes, or The Strap, was possible because CAKE had proven to festival organisers with an earlier Rally stage that you could ‘spend a tiny bit of money on design work’ and win against standard fabrication teams ‘who weren’t coming at it from an architectural lens’, Scott Moncrieff adds. Agnes could be getting an upgrade for this year’s August bank holiday festivals. The structure also won the people’s choice award at last month’s AJ Small Projects. A sign of better-designed nights out to come?
    The future is niche – and lesbian
    If the Mobile Dyke Bar and Agnes could be the future of festivals and club nights, is La Camionera the future of LGBTQ+ nighttime spaces more broadly? A well-polished, honed product for a community crying out for something decent designed especially for them? 
    Daniel Pope, of newly established design studio and architects Popelo, which worked on La Camionera, says the bar is special because the result is super-niche. Certainly, there is no underfoot nastiness, peeling paint or unwanted design features common to many of the old underground venues. Yet this is queer through and through. 
    ’There’s not really many queer spaces where you can get a really beautiful drink in a nice glass, where the floor isn’t sticky,’ says Pope. ‘And with funding being so difficult, often queer spaces can feel quite DIY and quite shabby, perhaps not thought-through. With La Camionera, we really tried to make it feel high-end. So we focused the budget on specific areas, like the bespoke bench seat and polished aluminium bar; it feels quite luxe.’
    Source: Rachel FerrimanLa Camionera interior by Popelo and WET Studio
    Those additions, Pope admits, had to be costed in and compensated for elsewhere. Making decisions like these is part of the ‘burden’ on queer architects delivering queer spaces – often pro bono or for a reduced fee. But designing with care and enthusiasm, and, crucially, with first-hand experience of being part of the community.
    As Pope says: ‘While I can’t talk for lesbians and there’s loads of spaces for gay men in London, I know that having a lesbian space that felt really sexy was key for La Camionera.
    The architect, who worked alongside LGBTQ+ set design firm Wet Studio on the job, argues that La Camionera’s queer energy was brought by that very queer team of ‘builders and makers who know how you want to feel in a space as a queer person’. On that basis, bespoke queer design for clubs, bars and music experiences in general could be the way forward – and a challenge to the troubles of the wider nighttime economy and a lack of LGBTQ+ representation in permanent spaces.
    He adds: ‘Talking from experience, when I was not out, I would go to events and never felt like I enjoyed it. It wasn’t until I started making queer friends and we would go to queer venues that you could be yourself and connect with other people in a really magnetic way.’

    queer architecture 2025-05-22
    Gino Spocchia

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    Tagsqueer architecture
    #lgbtq #nightlife #going #back #its
    LGBTQ+ nightlife is going back to its counter-cultural roots
    Queerness and nightlife go hand in hand. Out of the mainstream. Underground and counter-cultural. Whether it’s the location, venue, organisers or crowd, they are always outside the norm.  Some, like new lesbian bar La Camionera in Hackney, east London, have been designed, built and crafted by queer hands – the same ones which will soon be shaking, stirring and drinking negronis on a brushed aluminium countertop, or raising a glass in the purpose-built seating areas. Source: Rachel FerrimanLa Camionera The reopening of the quietly elegant La Camionerafollows a months-long conversion of a temporary space led by its trans owner and a team of queer architects, contractors and trades. It is unique and stylish.  Advertisement But that’s not the only reason this tailored LGBTQ+ space stands out. Its mere existence sits against a background of queer venue closures because of an unholy trinity of rising costs, licensing issues and safety concerns. London, to take one city, has lost half of these safe spaces since 2006. Waves of redevelopment and gentrification have had their impact, too. One of the most famous victims was the wildly beloved Joiners Arms pub in Hackney Road in 2015. Never forgotten, attempts continue to resurrect this institution somewhere else in London’s East End a decade on. But can La Camionera pave the way for a design-led renaissance of after-hours ‘queerness’? One thing is for sure, there is a growing queer movement – architects included – to create safe, accessible LGBTQ+ spaces and define what that might look like. We’re going out, to find out. The state of play The Night Time Industries Associationrecently reported that 37 per cent of all night clubs across the UK have permanently shut since March 2020. That’s an average of three clubs a week, or 150 a year.Advertisement LGBTQ+ venues make up a considerable chunk of this. In the capital, between 2006 and 2022, Greater London Authority numbers show that 75 bars, clubs and LGBTQ+ pubs shut down – sometimes forever.  The list keeps growing. In the past 18 months, G-A-Y Late in Soho and The Glory in Haggerston have closed. Meanwhile, a third LGBTQ+ safe space, Bethnal Green Working Men’s Club, has been fighting closure on and off for years – though it seems the east London venue may finally have had a late reprieve.  Venue closures are happening elsewhere in the UK, too, with Birmingham losing the Village Inn, Glasgow losing Bonjour and Sheffield losing the Queer Junction nightclub.  Based on the current rate of club closures, the NTIA warns the UK could have no nightclubs of any kind by 2030. The pro-nighttime body blames the collapse partly on the long-term impact of the Covid pandemic. Once closed down and locked up, these unique spaces rarely re-emerge, eyed up by developers for larger gain.  And, while the NTIA data does not explain how many of these closures are LGBTQ+, the community is among the hardest-hit because queerness and nightlife are so intertwined. Or, as Olimpia Burchiellaro, a shareholder of the Friends of The Joiners Arms campaign, puts it: ‘Nighttime is queer time’.  A call toArms While The Joiners Arms, where reportedlyAlexander McQueen used to hang out, became one of the first LGBTQ+ venues to get protection in the planning system because of the sexual orientation of its users back in 2017, no on-site replacement has yet popped up on Hackney Road. Tower Hamlets Council had imposed a planning condition requiring any new development on The Joiners Arms site to include an LGBTQ+ venue. Developer Regal Homes had agreed to it. However, the proposed scheme that forced the closure has been delayed. No development, no new venue.  Burchiellaro tells the AJ that The Joiners Arms shows that LGBTQ+ spaces often act as ‘canaries in the coalmine’; a bellwether of the redevelopment cycle and of the state of the nighttime economy more generally. With little planning protection, they can be easily lost because they are often perceived as ‘unproductive’ uses in buildings ripe for replacement. Source: Friends of The Joiners ArmsFriends of The Joiners Arms protest outside the former pub ‘Gentrification and redevelopment are making it more and more difficult for communities who are not solely focused on profit, like queer spaces, to exist,’ argues Burchiellaro. ‘And, although queer clubs and bars have always been businesses, they’ve always been so much more than that.’ In the meantime, the Friends of  The Joiners Arms campaign has put on ‘an itinerant, moving club night’ at other east London venues as an act of resistance against anti-LGBTQ+ gentrification and the demise of LGBTQ+ nightlife in the capital, according to Aska Welford, an architectural worker formerly with Karakusevic Carson Architects. Welford, who is leading on co-design for a future permanent home for The Joiners Arms campaign, adds: ‘Even without the physical space, without a permanent, fixed space, queer people continue to exist and have a good time and be together.’ Safe and sound In Edinburgh, GRAS architect Kirsty Watt has also resorted to moving club nights, dubbed ‘Femmergy’, that turn the city’s historic urban fabric – including most recently a former biscuit factory – into a playground for femme-presenting members of the LGBTQ+ community, including trans people and afab women. Watt says: ‘In Edinburgh the queer nightlife scene particularly focused around cis gay men and so women, non-binary and trans people weren’t necessarily welcome in those spaces and that was the point of it, because there wasn’t really a space at all.’ Source: Kirsty WattFemmergy club night While Femmergy has difficulties finding Edinburgh venues with level access and accessible toilets, the club nights have provided a safe space for people ‘to be inherently themselves and represent themselves in a way that they want to while still feeling safe’, says Watt.  Both accessibility and safety are central to Femmergy, and are what makes it queer, she tells the AJ, ‘because people need to feel like they have a representation within their urban space’. However, she admits that having level access and accessible toilets have ‘limited us in terms of what venues we can work with, particularly in Edinburgh, because so many of the buildings are historic’. Putting the pop in pop-up So, if permanent dedicated spaces don’t always exist, what about bringing the nuts-and-bolts of a party to the people instead? This is the concept behind the Mobile Dyke Bar, a travelling lesbian disco started by former Royal Academy Interior design student Lucy Nurnberg and her right-hand woman, Ali Wagner, as part of a wider project dubbed Uhaul Dyke Rescue, a series of design-led club nights. The Mobile Dyke Bar is made of prefabricated parts which ‘slot’ into rental vans, which Nurnberg suggests is a tongue-in-cheek response to hyper-masculine removal van culture as much as it is a declaration of space for lesbians when there is barely any.  Its next stop is Mighty Hoopla, a pop festival in south London, later this month – the Mobile Dyke Bar’s second outing at the LGBTQ+ friendly event.  Source: Courteney FrisbyThe Mobile Dyke Bar at Mighty Hoopla in 2024 ‘The idea was that this would be a friendly space, but also about taking space for ourselves and being like, “Look, we need a bit of a dedicated corner here”,’ explains Nurnberg, whose Uhaul Dyke Rescue service was a reaction to ‘queer spaces in London generally declining, especially lesbian spaces’. Nurnberg adds that her interior design course informed Uhaul’s philosophy, ‘which is a bit secret and underground’ and had to be done on the cheap. It also looks at temporary structures as queer structures.  ‘We had a scaffold structure on the dance floor for our first night because I know that dykes love to flex muscle,’ Nurnberg explains, ‘But I also wanted to make it for anybody more femme presenting, and for anybody wanting to look a bit sexy, so we put a swing on the structure and people loved it.’ Why architects should design the night CAKE, a Dalston, east London-based practice, which was behind the Agnes stage at Rally festival in south London last year, has experience on an even bigger scale of delivering for a queer crowd.  The Layher scaffolding and translucent fibreglass-clad structure was designed to flip to become ‘The Strap’ at Body Movements – a queer festival the following day. That’s when the versatility of the modular structure’s raised platforms, floating walls, and one central dance floor all came into action – bringing the audience, artist and stage together. ‘For both days, depending on the music, it was a completely different environment,’ says CAKE architect Emiliano Zavala. ‘At  Body Movements people were dancing up on terraces and the whole thing was inhabited, and for Rally, the crowd was low and spread out, with the stage a kind of undercroft. The difference was really interesting.’ Source: Rory GaylorAgnes by CAKE Architecture Why did CAKE take on the challenge? Hugh Scott Moncrieff, creative director, says it ‘wasn’t the idea of making money’ but the opportunity to make creative architecture that reflects music, rhythm and sound, as well as context. Agnes, or The Strap, was possible because CAKE had proven to festival organisers with an earlier Rally stage that you could ‘spend a tiny bit of money on design work’ and win against standard fabrication teams ‘who weren’t coming at it from an architectural lens’, Scott Moncrieff adds. Agnes could be getting an upgrade for this year’s August bank holiday festivals. The structure also won the people’s choice award at last month’s AJ Small Projects. A sign of better-designed nights out to come? The future is niche – and lesbian If the Mobile Dyke Bar and Agnes could be the future of festivals and club nights, is La Camionera the future of LGBTQ+ nighttime spaces more broadly? A well-polished, honed product for a community crying out for something decent designed especially for them?  Daniel Pope, of newly established design studio and architects Popelo, which worked on La Camionera, says the bar is special because the result is super-niche. Certainly, there is no underfoot nastiness, peeling paint or unwanted design features common to many of the old underground venues. Yet this is queer through and through.  ’There’s not really many queer spaces where you can get a really beautiful drink in a nice glass, where the floor isn’t sticky,’ says Pope. ‘And with funding being so difficult, often queer spaces can feel quite DIY and quite shabby, perhaps not thought-through. With La Camionera, we really tried to make it feel high-end. So we focused the budget on specific areas, like the bespoke bench seat and polished aluminium bar; it feels quite luxe.’ Source: Rachel FerrimanLa Camionera interior by Popelo and WET Studio Those additions, Pope admits, had to be costed in and compensated for elsewhere. Making decisions like these is part of the ‘burden’ on queer architects delivering queer spaces – often pro bono or for a reduced fee. But designing with care and enthusiasm, and, crucially, with first-hand experience of being part of the community. As Pope says: ‘While I can’t talk for lesbians and there’s loads of spaces for gay men in London, I know that having a lesbian space that felt really sexy was key for La Camionera. The architect, who worked alongside LGBTQ+ set design firm Wet Studio on the job, argues that La Camionera’s queer energy was brought by that very queer team of ‘builders and makers who know how you want to feel in a space as a queer person’. On that basis, bespoke queer design for clubs, bars and music experiences in general could be the way forward – and a challenge to the troubles of the wider nighttime economy and a lack of LGBTQ+ representation in permanent spaces. He adds: ‘Talking from experience, when I was not out, I would go to events and never felt like I enjoyed it. It wasn’t until I started making queer friends and we would go to queer venues that you could be yourself and connect with other people in a really magnetic way.’ queer architecture 2025-05-22 Gino Spocchia comment and share Tagsqueer architecture #lgbtq #nightlife #going #back #its
    WWW.ARCHITECTSJOURNAL.CO.UK
    LGBTQ+ nightlife is going back to its counter-cultural roots
    Queerness and nightlife go hand in hand. Out of the mainstream. Underground and counter-cultural. Whether it’s the location, venue, organisers or crowd, they are always outside the norm.  Some, like new lesbian bar La Camionera in Hackney, east London, have been designed, built and crafted by queer hands – the same ones which will soon be shaking, stirring and drinking negronis on a brushed aluminium countertop, or raising a glass in the purpose-built seating areas. Source: Rachel FerrimanLa Camionera The reopening of the quietly elegant La Camionera (Spanish for ‘female trucker’ and slang for butch lesbian) follows a months-long conversion of a temporary space led by its trans owner and a team of queer architects, contractors and trades. It is unique and stylish.  Advertisement But that’s not the only reason this tailored LGBTQ+ space stands out. Its mere existence sits against a background of queer venue closures because of an unholy trinity of rising costs, licensing issues and safety concerns. London, to take one city, has lost half of these safe spaces since 2006. Waves of redevelopment and gentrification have had their impact, too. One of the most famous victims was the wildly beloved Joiners Arms pub in Hackney Road in 2015. Never forgotten, attempts continue to resurrect this institution somewhere else in London’s East End a decade on. But can La Camionera pave the way for a design-led renaissance of after-hours ‘queerness’? One thing is for sure, there is a growing queer movement – architects included – to create safe, accessible LGBTQ+ spaces and define what that might look like. We’re going out (OUT), to find out. The state of play The Night Time Industries Association (NTIA) recently reported that 37 per cent of all night clubs across the UK have permanently shut since March 2020. That’s an average of three clubs a week, or 150 a year.Advertisement LGBTQ+ venues make up a considerable chunk of this. In the capital, between 2006 and 2022, Greater London Authority numbers show that 75 bars, clubs and LGBTQ+ pubs shut down – sometimes forever.  The list keeps growing. In the past 18 months, G-A-Y Late in Soho and The Glory in Haggerston have closed. Meanwhile, a third LGBTQ+ safe space, Bethnal Green Working Men’s Club, has been fighting closure on and off for years – though it seems the east London venue may finally have had a late reprieve.  Venue closures are happening elsewhere in the UK, too, with Birmingham losing the Village Inn, Glasgow losing Bonjour and Sheffield losing the Queer Junction nightclub.  Based on the current rate of club closures, the NTIA warns the UK could have no nightclubs of any kind by 2030. The pro-nighttime body blames the collapse partly on the long-term impact of the Covid pandemic. Once closed down and locked up, these unique spaces rarely re-emerge, eyed up by developers for larger gain.  And, while the NTIA data does not explain how many of these closures are LGBTQ+, the community is among the hardest-hit because queerness and nightlife are so intertwined. Or, as Olimpia Burchiellaro, a shareholder of the Friends of The Joiners Arms campaign, puts it: ‘Nighttime is queer time’.  A call to (Joiners) Arms While The Joiners Arms, where reportedlyAlexander McQueen used to hang out, became one of the first LGBTQ+ venues to get protection in the planning system because of the sexual orientation of its users back in 2017, no on-site replacement has yet popped up on Hackney Road. Tower Hamlets Council had imposed a planning condition requiring any new development on The Joiners Arms site to include an LGBTQ+ venue. Developer Regal Homes had agreed to it. However, the proposed scheme that forced the closure has been delayed. No development, no new venue.  Burchiellaro tells the AJ that The Joiners Arms shows that LGBTQ+ spaces often act as ‘canaries in the coalmine’; a bellwether of the redevelopment cycle and of the state of the nighttime economy more generally. With little planning protection, they can be easily lost because they are often perceived as ‘unproductive’ uses in buildings ripe for replacement. Source: Friends of The Joiners ArmsFriends of The Joiners Arms protest outside the former pub ‘Gentrification and redevelopment are making it more and more difficult for communities who are not solely focused on profit, like queer spaces, to exist,’ argues Burchiellaro. ‘And, although queer clubs and bars have always been businesses, they’ve always been so much more than that.’ In the meantime, the Friends of  The Joiners Arms campaign has put on ‘an itinerant, moving club night’ at other east London venues as an act of resistance against anti-LGBTQ+ gentrification and the demise of LGBTQ+ nightlife in the capital, according to Aska Welford, an architectural worker formerly with Karakusevic Carson Architects. Welford, who is leading on co-design for a future permanent home for The Joiners Arms campaign, adds: ‘Even without the physical space, without a permanent, fixed space, queer people continue to exist and have a good time and be together.’ Safe and sound In Edinburgh, GRAS architect Kirsty Watt has also resorted to moving club nights, dubbed ‘Femmergy’, that turn the city’s historic urban fabric – including most recently a former biscuit factory – into a playground for femme-presenting members of the LGBTQ+ community, including trans people and afab women. Watt says: ‘In Edinburgh the queer nightlife scene particularly focused around cis gay men and so women, non-binary and trans people weren’t necessarily welcome in those spaces and that was the point of it, because there wasn’t really a space at all.’ Source: Kirsty WattFemmergy club night While Femmergy has difficulties finding Edinburgh venues with level access and accessible toilets, the club nights have provided a safe space for people ‘to be inherently themselves and represent themselves in a way that they want to while still feeling safe’, says Watt.  Both accessibility and safety are central to Femmergy, and are what makes it queer, she tells the AJ, ‘because people need to feel like they have a representation within their urban space’. However, she admits that having level access and accessible toilets have ‘limited us in terms of what venues we can work with, particularly in Edinburgh, because so many of the buildings are historic’. Putting the pop in pop-up So, if permanent dedicated spaces don’t always exist, what about bringing the nuts-and-bolts of a party to the people instead? This is the concept behind the Mobile Dyke Bar, a travelling lesbian disco started by former Royal Academy Interior design student Lucy Nurnberg and her right-hand woman, Ali Wagner, as part of a wider project dubbed Uhaul Dyke Rescue, a series of design-led club nights. The Mobile Dyke Bar is made of prefabricated parts which ‘slot’ into rental vans, which Nurnberg suggests is a tongue-in-cheek response to hyper-masculine removal van culture as much as it is a declaration of space for lesbians when there is barely any.  Its next stop is Mighty Hoopla, a pop festival in south London, later this month – the Mobile Dyke Bar’s second outing at the LGBTQ+ friendly event.  Source: Courteney FrisbyThe Mobile Dyke Bar at Mighty Hoopla in 2024 ‘The idea was that this would be a friendly space, but also about taking space for ourselves and being like, “Look, we need a bit of a dedicated corner here”,’ explains Nurnberg, whose Uhaul Dyke Rescue service was a reaction to ‘queer spaces in London generally declining, especially lesbian spaces’. Nurnberg adds that her interior design course informed Uhaul’s philosophy, ‘which is a bit secret and underground’ and had to be done on the cheap. It also looks at temporary structures as queer structures.  ‘We had a scaffold structure on the dance floor for our first night because I know that dykes love to flex muscle,’ Nurnberg explains, ‘But I also wanted to make it for anybody more femme presenting, and for anybody wanting to look a bit sexy, so we put a swing on the structure and people loved it.’ Why architects should design the night CAKE, a Dalston, east London-based practice, which was behind the Agnes stage at Rally festival in south London last year, has experience on an even bigger scale of delivering for a queer crowd.  The Layher scaffolding and translucent fibreglass-clad structure was designed to flip to become ‘The Strap’ at Body Movements – a queer festival the following day. That’s when the versatility of the modular structure’s raised platforms, floating walls, and one central dance floor all came into action – bringing the audience, artist and stage together. ‘For both days, depending on the music, it was a completely different environment,’ says CAKE architect Emiliano Zavala. ‘At  Body Movements people were dancing up on terraces and the whole thing was inhabited, and for Rally, the crowd was low and spread out, with the stage a kind of undercroft. The difference was really interesting.’ Source: Rory GaylorAgnes by CAKE Architecture Why did CAKE take on the challenge? Hugh Scott Moncrieff, creative director, says it ‘wasn’t the idea of making money’ but the opportunity to make creative architecture that reflects music, rhythm and sound, as well as context. Agnes, or The Strap, was possible because CAKE had proven to festival organisers with an earlier Rally stage that you could ‘spend a tiny bit of money on design work’ and win against standard fabrication teams ‘who weren’t coming at it from an architectural lens’, Scott Moncrieff adds. Agnes could be getting an upgrade for this year’s August bank holiday festivals. The structure also won the people’s choice award at last month’s AJ Small Projects. A sign of better-designed nights out to come? The future is niche – and lesbian If the Mobile Dyke Bar and Agnes could be the future of festivals and club nights, is La Camionera the future of LGBTQ+ nighttime spaces more broadly? A well-polished, honed product for a community crying out for something decent designed especially for them?  Daniel Pope, of newly established design studio and architects Popelo, which worked on La Camionera, says the bar is special because the result is super-niche. Certainly, there is no underfoot nastiness, peeling paint or unwanted design features common to many of the old underground venues. Yet this is queer through and through.  ’There’s not really many queer spaces where you can get a really beautiful drink in a nice glass, where the floor isn’t sticky,’ says Pope. ‘And with funding being so difficult, often queer spaces can feel quite DIY and quite shabby, perhaps not thought-through. With La Camionera, we really tried to make it feel high-end. So we focused the budget on specific areas, like the bespoke bench seat and polished aluminium bar; it feels quite luxe.’ Source: Rachel FerrimanLa Camionera interior by Popelo and WET Studio Those additions, Pope admits, had to be costed in and compensated for elsewhere. Making decisions like these is part of the ‘burden’ on queer architects delivering queer spaces – often pro bono or for a reduced fee. But designing with care and enthusiasm, and, crucially, with first-hand experience of being part of the community. As Pope says: ‘While I can’t talk for lesbians and there’s loads of spaces for gay men in London, I know that having a lesbian space that felt really sexy was key for La Camionera. The architect, who worked alongside LGBTQ+ set design firm Wet Studio on the job, argues that La Camionera’s queer energy was brought by that very queer team of ‘builders and makers who know how you want to feel in a space as a queer person’. On that basis, bespoke queer design for clubs, bars and music experiences in general could be the way forward – and a challenge to the troubles of the wider nighttime economy and a lack of LGBTQ+ representation in permanent spaces. He adds: ‘Talking from experience, when I was not out, I would go to events and never felt like I enjoyed it. It wasn’t until I started making queer friends and we would go to queer venues that you could be yourself and connect with other people in a really magnetic way.’ queer architecture 2025-05-22 Gino Spocchia comment and share Tagsqueer architecture
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  • These 1920s Color Palettes are ‘Greater than Gatsby’

    These 1920s Color Palettes are ‘Greater than Gatsby’
    Preston Lee • 

    In this article:See more ▼Post may contain affiliate links which give us commissions at no cost to you.There’s something undeniably captivating about the color schemes of the Roaring Twenties. As a designer with a passion for historical aesthetics, I’ve always been drawn to the sophisticated elegance and bold statements that defined this transformative decade. The 1920s represented liberation from Victorian constraints, embraced modernism, and celebrated luxury in ways that continue to influence contemporary design a century later.
    If you’re looking to infuse your next project with the timeless glamour and innovative spirit of the Jazz Age, you’re in luck. I’ve compiled eight stunning 1920s-inspired color palettes that perfectly capture this iconic era while remaining remarkably relevant for today’s design landscape.
    Psst... Did you know you can get unlimited downloads of 59,000+ fonts and millions of other creative assets for just /mo? Learn more »The 8 Most Elegant 1920s Color Palettes
    1. Gatsby Glamour

    #CBA135

    #0C0C0C

    #F5F5F5

    #8B0000

    A luxurious blend of antique gold, deep black, ivory, and crimson red, capturing the opulence of The Great Gatsby era.
    I’m particularly fond of this palette for luxury branding or special event designs. These colors instantly communicate sophistication and extravagance – perfect when you want to make a statement that feels both historic and contemporary. The contrast between the warm gold and cool neutrals creates a balanced tension that draws the eye.
    2. Jazz Age Jewel

    #7F00FF

    #FFD700

    #2E8B57

    #000000

    Vibrant amethyst purple, gleaming gold, rich emerald green, and classic black, reflecting the boldness of jazz clubs and speakeasies.Get 300+ Fonts for FREEEnter your email to download our 100% free "Font Lover's Bundle". For commercial & personal use. No royalties. No fees. No attribution. 100% free to use anywhere.

    When I need to create something with dramatic flair, this palette never disappoints. These jewel tones embody the adventurous spirit of the era, when conventional rules were being broken and new forms of expression were emerging. I find it works wonderfully for nightlife-themed projects or any design that aims to capture a sense of excitement and rhythm.
    3. Deco Dreams

    #4682B4

    #D2B48C

    #A9A9A9

    #FFFFFF

    Steel blue, tan, dark gray, and white combine to create a sleek, modern palette emblematic of Art Deco style.
    The architectural influence is unmistakable in this palette. These colors remind me of the iconic skyscrapers that transformed urban skylines during the 1920s. The cool rationality of steel blue paired with warm tan creates a beautiful balance that works exceptionally well for professional environments and modern interiors with historical references.
    4. Flapper Chic

    #f04b41

    #F5DEB3

    #000000

    #FFFFFF

    Playful hot pink, soft wheat, bold black, and crisp white reflect the fashion-forward spirit of flapper style.
    This lively combination captures the youthful energy and rebellion that characterized the flapper movement. Whenever I use this palette, I’m reminded of the revolutionary changes in women’s fashion during this era – shorter hemlines, bobbed hair, and a newfound sense of freedom. It’s perfect for projects that need a touch of feminine boldness with historical depth.
    5. Speakeasy Shadows

    #2F4F4F

    #8B0000

    #A0522D

    #000000

    Dark slate gray, deep red, sienna brown, and black evoke the mysterious allure of hidden speakeasies.
    There’s something irresistibly secretive about these deep, rich tones. I love using this palette when designing for brands that want to convey exclusivity or a sense of insider knowledge. The colors feel substantive and slightly mysterious, perfect for creating depth in any design project that aims to tell a compelling story.
    6. Art Deco Sunrise

    #FFA500

    #FF4500

    #FFD700

    #000000

    Bright orange, fiery red-orange, golden yellow, and white capture the vibrant energy of Art Deco motifs.
    When optimism is the primary message, this radiant palette delivers. Inspired by the sunburst patterns so prevalent in Art Deco design, these warm, vibrant hues communicate progress and forward momentum. I’ve used this combination for everything from travel brands to motivational campaigns with great success.
    7. Peacock Parlor

    #1E90FF

    #32CD32

    #8A2BE2

    #000000

    Electric blue, lime green, vivid violet, and black mirror the extravagant colors found in 1920s parlor rooms.
    This bold, somewhat unexpected combination speaks to the experimental side of 1920s design. During this decade, international influences like Japanese prints and African art were making their way into Western interiors, bringing with them more adventurous color stories. I find this palette particularly effective for digital projects that need to stand out in crowded visual environments.
    8. Champagne & Charcoal

    #F7E7CE

    #36454F

    #D3D3D3

    #FFFFFF

    Soft champagne, charcoal gray, light gray, and white create a sophisticated, understated palette.
    Sometimes subtlety speaks volumes. This refined palette channels the quiet luxury that underpinned much of 1920s design. Not everything was bold and dramatic – there was also a movement toward elegant restraint. This combination works beautifully for upscale branding, wedding design, or any project where sophistication is the primary goal.
    Why 1920s Color Palettes Remain Relevant Today
    The enduring appeal of 1920s color schemes isn’t simply about nostalgia. This was a period of profound transformation in design thinking, as traditional Victorian excess gave way to modernist principles that continue to shape our visual language today.
    The 1920s represented a unique moment when the handcrafted met the machine-made, when traditional luxury was being redefined through the lens of new technologies and materials. The color palettes from this era reflect this fascinating tension – simultaneously honoring tradition while pushing boldly forward.
    As a designer working in 2025, I find that incorporating these historical palettes provides a richness and contextual depth that purely contemporary color schemes sometimes lack. There’s a storytelling aspect to these colors that resonates deeply with audiences looking for authenticity and meaning in design.

    How to Incorporate 1920s Colors in Contemporary Design
    After years of experimenting with these historical palettes, I’ve developed some strategies for using them effectively in modern contexts:
    Create Unexpected Pairings
    Try combining 1920s color schemes with ultra-contemporary design elements. The juxtaposition can create a fascinating dialogue between past and present. I recently paired the Gatsby Glamour palette with minimal sans-serif typography and negative space for a luxury hotel project – the result felt both timeless and thoroughly modern.
    Use Strategic Proportions
    You don’t need to use all colors equally. Consider using the bolder hues as accents while letting neutrals dominate the overall design. For example, with the Jazz Age Jewel palette, I often use the black as a grounding base, with strategic pops of amethyst, gold, and emerald creating focal points.
    Consider Contemporary Contexts
    Think about how these historical colors might translate to digital environments. The high-contrast combinations popular in the 1920s actually work remarkably well for accessibility in UI design, providing sufficient distinction between elements while maintaining aesthetic cohesion.
    Explore Material Translations
    The 1920s was characterized by innovative materials like Bakelite, chrome, and lacquered surfaces. Consider how your chosen palette might express itself through different materials and textures. The Deco Dreams palette, for instance, takes on new life when imagined in contemporary materials like frosted glass, brushed metal, and polished concrete.

    The Historical Context Behind These Palettes
    Understanding why certain colors dominated the 1920s design landscape helps us use them more intentionally today:
    Post-War Optimism
    After the darkness of World War I, there was a collective desire for brightness and celebration. This explains the prevalence of gold tones and vibrant accents in palettes like Art Deco Sunrise and Jazz Age Jewel.
    Technological Advances
    New synthetic dyes and manufacturing processes made previously rare colors more accessible. Electric blues and vibrant purples that were once the exclusive domain of royalty became available to the middle class, influencing palettes like Peacock Parlor.
    Global Influences
    The 1920s saw increased international travel and cultural exchange, bringing new color sensibilities from Egypt, East Asia, and African art. These influences expanded the typical Western color vocabulary considerably.
    Changing Social Norms
    As women gained the right to vote and entered the workforce in greater numbers, there was a shift toward bolder self-expression in fashion and design. The vibrant accents in palettes like Flapper Chic reflect this new sense of freedom and assertiveness.
    Applying 1920s Palettes Across Design Disciplines
    These versatile color combinations can enhance projects across multiple design fields:
    Digital Design
    The high contrast and distinctive color relationships in 1920s palettes translate surprisingly well to screen-based media. I’ve used the Speakeasy Shadows palette for an immersive storytelling website with excellent results – the deep, rich tones created an engaging experience that kept users exploring.
    Environmental Design
    The architectural roots of Art Deco make these palettes natural choices for interior and environmental design. The Champagne & Charcoal palette has been my go-to for creating sophisticated retail environments that feel both contemporary and connected to design history.
    Fashion & Textile Design
    The cyclical nature of fashion means that 1920s color stories regularly find their way back into contemporary wardrobes. The Flapper Chic palette continues to inform collections that balance playfulness with sophistication, especially for eveningwear and special occasions.
    Product Design
    The bold geometry and distinctive color schemes of the 1920s can transform ordinary objects into conversation pieces. I recently collaborated on a kitchenware collection using the Gatsby Glamour palette – the combination of black, gold, ivory, and crimson elevated simple forms into luxury items.

    Conclusion: Embracing Timeless Elegance
    As we navigate the complex visual landscape of 2025, there’s something reassuring about connecting with the refined aesthetics of the past. The 1920s represented a pivotal moment in design history when tradition and innovation converged to create something truly distinctive.
    By incorporating these eight elegant color palettes into your work, you’re not simply borrowing from history – you’re participating in an ongoing conversation about how we express values like luxury, progress, and sophistication through color.
    Whether you’re designing a website, creating a brand identity, or reimagining an interior space, these timeless combinations offer a solid foundation that can be adapted to countless contemporary contexts. The enduring appeal of 1920s aesthetics proves that truly exceptional design transcends its era to become something timeless.
    So go ahead – let the elegance and boldness of the Jazz Age inspire your next creative endeavor. Your work will be all the richer for it.

    Preston Lee

    Preston Lee is a graphic and web designer who grew up drawing, painting, and building with Lego. Okay, let's face it: he still does all of those things. But now, he gets paid to design websites, design graphics, write, and do all kinds of creative things. His advice has been featured by Entrepreneur, Inc, Forbes, Adobe, and many more.

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    #these #1920s #color #palettes #are
    These 1920s Color Palettes are ‘Greater than Gatsby’
    These 1920s Color Palettes are ‘Greater than Gatsby’ Preston Lee •  In this article:See more ▼Post may contain affiliate links which give us commissions at no cost to you.There’s something undeniably captivating about the color schemes of the Roaring Twenties. As a designer with a passion for historical aesthetics, I’ve always been drawn to the sophisticated elegance and bold statements that defined this transformative decade. The 1920s represented liberation from Victorian constraints, embraced modernism, and celebrated luxury in ways that continue to influence contemporary design a century later. If you’re looking to infuse your next project with the timeless glamour and innovative spirit of the Jazz Age, you’re in luck. I’ve compiled eight stunning 1920s-inspired color palettes that perfectly capture this iconic era while remaining remarkably relevant for today’s design landscape. 👋 Psst... Did you know you can get unlimited downloads of 59,000+ fonts and millions of other creative assets for just /mo? Learn more »The 8 Most Elegant 1920s Color Palettes 1. Gatsby Glamour #CBA135 #0C0C0C #F5F5F5 #8B0000 A luxurious blend of antique gold, deep black, ivory, and crimson red, capturing the opulence of The Great Gatsby era. I’m particularly fond of this palette for luxury branding or special event designs. These colors instantly communicate sophistication and extravagance – perfect when you want to make a statement that feels both historic and contemporary. The contrast between the warm gold and cool neutrals creates a balanced tension that draws the eye. 2. Jazz Age Jewel #7F00FF #FFD700 #2E8B57 #000000 Vibrant amethyst purple, gleaming gold, rich emerald green, and classic black, reflecting the boldness of jazz clubs and speakeasies.Get 300+ Fonts for FREEEnter your email to download our 100% free "Font Lover's Bundle". For commercial & personal use. No royalties. No fees. No attribution. 100% free to use anywhere. When I need to create something with dramatic flair, this palette never disappoints. These jewel tones embody the adventurous spirit of the era, when conventional rules were being broken and new forms of expression were emerging. I find it works wonderfully for nightlife-themed projects or any design that aims to capture a sense of excitement and rhythm. 3. Deco Dreams #4682B4 #D2B48C #A9A9A9 #FFFFFF Steel blue, tan, dark gray, and white combine to create a sleek, modern palette emblematic of Art Deco style. The architectural influence is unmistakable in this palette. These colors remind me of the iconic skyscrapers that transformed urban skylines during the 1920s. The cool rationality of steel blue paired with warm tan creates a beautiful balance that works exceptionally well for professional environments and modern interiors with historical references. 4. Flapper Chic #f04b41 #F5DEB3 #000000 #FFFFFF Playful hot pink, soft wheat, bold black, and crisp white reflect the fashion-forward spirit of flapper style. This lively combination captures the youthful energy and rebellion that characterized the flapper movement. Whenever I use this palette, I’m reminded of the revolutionary changes in women’s fashion during this era – shorter hemlines, bobbed hair, and a newfound sense of freedom. It’s perfect for projects that need a touch of feminine boldness with historical depth. 5. Speakeasy Shadows #2F4F4F #8B0000 #A0522D #000000 Dark slate gray, deep red, sienna brown, and black evoke the mysterious allure of hidden speakeasies. There’s something irresistibly secretive about these deep, rich tones. I love using this palette when designing for brands that want to convey exclusivity or a sense of insider knowledge. The colors feel substantive and slightly mysterious, perfect for creating depth in any design project that aims to tell a compelling story. 6. Art Deco Sunrise #FFA500 #FF4500 #FFD700 #000000 Bright orange, fiery red-orange, golden yellow, and white capture the vibrant energy of Art Deco motifs. When optimism is the primary message, this radiant palette delivers. Inspired by the sunburst patterns so prevalent in Art Deco design, these warm, vibrant hues communicate progress and forward momentum. I’ve used this combination for everything from travel brands to motivational campaigns with great success. 7. Peacock Parlor #1E90FF #32CD32 #8A2BE2 #000000 Electric blue, lime green, vivid violet, and black mirror the extravagant colors found in 1920s parlor rooms. This bold, somewhat unexpected combination speaks to the experimental side of 1920s design. During this decade, international influences like Japanese prints and African art were making their way into Western interiors, bringing with them more adventurous color stories. I find this palette particularly effective for digital projects that need to stand out in crowded visual environments. 8. Champagne & Charcoal #F7E7CE #36454F #D3D3D3 #FFFFFF Soft champagne, charcoal gray, light gray, and white create a sophisticated, understated palette. Sometimes subtlety speaks volumes. This refined palette channels the quiet luxury that underpinned much of 1920s design. Not everything was bold and dramatic – there was also a movement toward elegant restraint. This combination works beautifully for upscale branding, wedding design, or any project where sophistication is the primary goal. Why 1920s Color Palettes Remain Relevant Today The enduring appeal of 1920s color schemes isn’t simply about nostalgia. This was a period of profound transformation in design thinking, as traditional Victorian excess gave way to modernist principles that continue to shape our visual language today. The 1920s represented a unique moment when the handcrafted met the machine-made, when traditional luxury was being redefined through the lens of new technologies and materials. The color palettes from this era reflect this fascinating tension – simultaneously honoring tradition while pushing boldly forward. As a designer working in 2025, I find that incorporating these historical palettes provides a richness and contextual depth that purely contemporary color schemes sometimes lack. There’s a storytelling aspect to these colors that resonates deeply with audiences looking for authenticity and meaning in design. How to Incorporate 1920s Colors in Contemporary Design After years of experimenting with these historical palettes, I’ve developed some strategies for using them effectively in modern contexts: Create Unexpected Pairings Try combining 1920s color schemes with ultra-contemporary design elements. The juxtaposition can create a fascinating dialogue between past and present. I recently paired the Gatsby Glamour palette with minimal sans-serif typography and negative space for a luxury hotel project – the result felt both timeless and thoroughly modern. Use Strategic Proportions You don’t need to use all colors equally. Consider using the bolder hues as accents while letting neutrals dominate the overall design. For example, with the Jazz Age Jewel palette, I often use the black as a grounding base, with strategic pops of amethyst, gold, and emerald creating focal points. Consider Contemporary Contexts Think about how these historical colors might translate to digital environments. The high-contrast combinations popular in the 1920s actually work remarkably well for accessibility in UI design, providing sufficient distinction between elements while maintaining aesthetic cohesion. Explore Material Translations The 1920s was characterized by innovative materials like Bakelite, chrome, and lacquered surfaces. Consider how your chosen palette might express itself through different materials and textures. The Deco Dreams palette, for instance, takes on new life when imagined in contemporary materials like frosted glass, brushed metal, and polished concrete. The Historical Context Behind These Palettes Understanding why certain colors dominated the 1920s design landscape helps us use them more intentionally today: Post-War Optimism After the darkness of World War I, there was a collective desire for brightness and celebration. This explains the prevalence of gold tones and vibrant accents in palettes like Art Deco Sunrise and Jazz Age Jewel. Technological Advances New synthetic dyes and manufacturing processes made previously rare colors more accessible. Electric blues and vibrant purples that were once the exclusive domain of royalty became available to the middle class, influencing palettes like Peacock Parlor. Global Influences The 1920s saw increased international travel and cultural exchange, bringing new color sensibilities from Egypt, East Asia, and African art. These influences expanded the typical Western color vocabulary considerably. Changing Social Norms As women gained the right to vote and entered the workforce in greater numbers, there was a shift toward bolder self-expression in fashion and design. The vibrant accents in palettes like Flapper Chic reflect this new sense of freedom and assertiveness. Applying 1920s Palettes Across Design Disciplines These versatile color combinations can enhance projects across multiple design fields: Digital Design The high contrast and distinctive color relationships in 1920s palettes translate surprisingly well to screen-based media. I’ve used the Speakeasy Shadows palette for an immersive storytelling website with excellent results – the deep, rich tones created an engaging experience that kept users exploring. Environmental Design The architectural roots of Art Deco make these palettes natural choices for interior and environmental design. The Champagne & Charcoal palette has been my go-to for creating sophisticated retail environments that feel both contemporary and connected to design history. Fashion & Textile Design The cyclical nature of fashion means that 1920s color stories regularly find their way back into contemporary wardrobes. The Flapper Chic palette continues to inform collections that balance playfulness with sophistication, especially for eveningwear and special occasions. Product Design The bold geometry and distinctive color schemes of the 1920s can transform ordinary objects into conversation pieces. I recently collaborated on a kitchenware collection using the Gatsby Glamour palette – the combination of black, gold, ivory, and crimson elevated simple forms into luxury items. Conclusion: Embracing Timeless Elegance As we navigate the complex visual landscape of 2025, there’s something reassuring about connecting with the refined aesthetics of the past. The 1920s represented a pivotal moment in design history when tradition and innovation converged to create something truly distinctive. By incorporating these eight elegant color palettes into your work, you’re not simply borrowing from history – you’re participating in an ongoing conversation about how we express values like luxury, progress, and sophistication through color. Whether you’re designing a website, creating a brand identity, or reimagining an interior space, these timeless combinations offer a solid foundation that can be adapted to countless contemporary contexts. The enduring appeal of 1920s aesthetics proves that truly exceptional design transcends its era to become something timeless. So go ahead – let the elegance and boldness of the Jazz Age inspire your next creative endeavor. Your work will be all the richer for it. Preston Lee Preston Lee is a graphic and web designer who grew up drawing, painting, and building with Lego. Okay, let's face it: he still does all of those things. But now, he gets paid to design websites, design graphics, write, and do all kinds of creative things. His advice has been featured by Entrepreneur, Inc, Forbes, Adobe, and many more. How Fonts Influence Tone and Clarity in Animated VideosAudiences interact differently with messages based on which fonts designers choose to use within a text presentation. Fonts shape how...30 Stamp Fonts for a Crafty, Handmade FeelThere’s something incredibly satisfying about the texture and character of a stamped impression. As a graphic designer who’s spent countless...30 Monoline Fonts That Create Clean, Consistent Designs in 2025I’ve noticed monoline fonts taking center stage across branding, web design, and print materials in . There’s something undeniably elegant... #these #1920s #color #palettes #are
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    These 1920s Color Palettes are ‘Greater than Gatsby’
    These 1920s Color Palettes are ‘Greater than Gatsby’ Preston Lee •  In this article:See more ▼Post may contain affiliate links which give us commissions at no cost to you.There’s something undeniably captivating about the color schemes of the Roaring Twenties. As a designer with a passion for historical aesthetics, I’ve always been drawn to the sophisticated elegance and bold statements that defined this transformative decade. The 1920s represented liberation from Victorian constraints, embraced modernism, and celebrated luxury in ways that continue to influence contemporary design a century later. If you’re looking to infuse your next project with the timeless glamour and innovative spirit of the Jazz Age, you’re in luck. I’ve compiled eight stunning 1920s-inspired color palettes that perfectly capture this iconic era while remaining remarkably relevant for today’s design landscape. 👋 Psst... Did you know you can get unlimited downloads of 59,000+ fonts and millions of other creative assets for just $16.95/mo? Learn more »The 8 Most Elegant 1920s Color Palettes 1. Gatsby Glamour #CBA135 #0C0C0C #F5F5F5 #8B0000 A luxurious blend of antique gold, deep black, ivory, and crimson red, capturing the opulence of The Great Gatsby era. I’m particularly fond of this palette for luxury branding or special event designs. These colors instantly communicate sophistication and extravagance – perfect when you want to make a statement that feels both historic and contemporary. The contrast between the warm gold and cool neutrals creates a balanced tension that draws the eye. 2. Jazz Age Jewel #7F00FF #FFD700 #2E8B57 #000000 Vibrant amethyst purple, gleaming gold, rich emerald green, and classic black, reflecting the boldness of jazz clubs and speakeasies.Get 300+ Fonts for FREEEnter your email to download our 100% free "Font Lover's Bundle". For commercial & personal use. No royalties. No fees. No attribution. 100% free to use anywhere. When I need to create something with dramatic flair, this palette never disappoints. These jewel tones embody the adventurous spirit of the era, when conventional rules were being broken and new forms of expression were emerging. I find it works wonderfully for nightlife-themed projects or any design that aims to capture a sense of excitement and rhythm. 3. Deco Dreams #4682B4 #D2B48C #A9A9A9 #FFFFFF Steel blue, tan, dark gray, and white combine to create a sleek, modern palette emblematic of Art Deco style. The architectural influence is unmistakable in this palette. These colors remind me of the iconic skyscrapers that transformed urban skylines during the 1920s. The cool rationality of steel blue paired with warm tan creates a beautiful balance that works exceptionally well for professional environments and modern interiors with historical references. 4. Flapper Chic #f04b41 #F5DEB3 #000000 #FFFFFF Playful hot pink, soft wheat, bold black, and crisp white reflect the fashion-forward spirit of flapper style. This lively combination captures the youthful energy and rebellion that characterized the flapper movement. Whenever I use this palette, I’m reminded of the revolutionary changes in women’s fashion during this era – shorter hemlines, bobbed hair, and a newfound sense of freedom. It’s perfect for projects that need a touch of feminine boldness with historical depth. 5. Speakeasy Shadows #2F4F4F #8B0000 #A0522D #000000 Dark slate gray, deep red, sienna brown, and black evoke the mysterious allure of hidden speakeasies. There’s something irresistibly secretive about these deep, rich tones. I love using this palette when designing for brands that want to convey exclusivity or a sense of insider knowledge. The colors feel substantive and slightly mysterious, perfect for creating depth in any design project that aims to tell a compelling story. 6. Art Deco Sunrise #FFA500 #FF4500 #FFD700 #000000 Bright orange, fiery red-orange, golden yellow, and white capture the vibrant energy of Art Deco motifs. When optimism is the primary message, this radiant palette delivers. Inspired by the sunburst patterns so prevalent in Art Deco design, these warm, vibrant hues communicate progress and forward momentum. I’ve used this combination for everything from travel brands to motivational campaigns with great success. 7. Peacock Parlor #1E90FF #32CD32 #8A2BE2 #000000 Electric blue, lime green, vivid violet, and black mirror the extravagant colors found in 1920s parlor rooms. This bold, somewhat unexpected combination speaks to the experimental side of 1920s design. During this decade, international influences like Japanese prints and African art were making their way into Western interiors, bringing with them more adventurous color stories. I find this palette particularly effective for digital projects that need to stand out in crowded visual environments. 8. Champagne & Charcoal #F7E7CE #36454F #D3D3D3 #FFFFFF Soft champagne, charcoal gray, light gray, and white create a sophisticated, understated palette. Sometimes subtlety speaks volumes. This refined palette channels the quiet luxury that underpinned much of 1920s design. Not everything was bold and dramatic – there was also a movement toward elegant restraint. This combination works beautifully for upscale branding, wedding design, or any project where sophistication is the primary goal. Why 1920s Color Palettes Remain Relevant Today The enduring appeal of 1920s color schemes isn’t simply about nostalgia. This was a period of profound transformation in design thinking, as traditional Victorian excess gave way to modernist principles that continue to shape our visual language today. The 1920s represented a unique moment when the handcrafted met the machine-made, when traditional luxury was being redefined through the lens of new technologies and materials. The color palettes from this era reflect this fascinating tension – simultaneously honoring tradition while pushing boldly forward. As a designer working in 2025, I find that incorporating these historical palettes provides a richness and contextual depth that purely contemporary color schemes sometimes lack. There’s a storytelling aspect to these colors that resonates deeply with audiences looking for authenticity and meaning in design. How to Incorporate 1920s Colors in Contemporary Design After years of experimenting with these historical palettes, I’ve developed some strategies for using them effectively in modern contexts: Create Unexpected Pairings Try combining 1920s color schemes with ultra-contemporary design elements. The juxtaposition can create a fascinating dialogue between past and present. I recently paired the Gatsby Glamour palette with minimal sans-serif typography and negative space for a luxury hotel project – the result felt both timeless and thoroughly modern. Use Strategic Proportions You don’t need to use all colors equally. Consider using the bolder hues as accents while letting neutrals dominate the overall design. For example, with the Jazz Age Jewel palette, I often use the black as a grounding base, with strategic pops of amethyst, gold, and emerald creating focal points. Consider Contemporary Contexts Think about how these historical colors might translate to digital environments. The high-contrast combinations popular in the 1920s actually work remarkably well for accessibility in UI design, providing sufficient distinction between elements while maintaining aesthetic cohesion. Explore Material Translations The 1920s was characterized by innovative materials like Bakelite, chrome, and lacquered surfaces. Consider how your chosen palette might express itself through different materials and textures. The Deco Dreams palette, for instance, takes on new life when imagined in contemporary materials like frosted glass, brushed metal, and polished concrete. The Historical Context Behind These Palettes Understanding why certain colors dominated the 1920s design landscape helps us use them more intentionally today: Post-War Optimism After the darkness of World War I, there was a collective desire for brightness and celebration. This explains the prevalence of gold tones and vibrant accents in palettes like Art Deco Sunrise and Jazz Age Jewel. Technological Advances New synthetic dyes and manufacturing processes made previously rare colors more accessible. Electric blues and vibrant purples that were once the exclusive domain of royalty became available to the middle class, influencing palettes like Peacock Parlor. Global Influences The 1920s saw increased international travel and cultural exchange, bringing new color sensibilities from Egypt (following the discovery of Tutankhamun’s tomb), East Asia, and African art. These influences expanded the typical Western color vocabulary considerably. Changing Social Norms As women gained the right to vote and entered the workforce in greater numbers, there was a shift toward bolder self-expression in fashion and design. The vibrant accents in palettes like Flapper Chic reflect this new sense of freedom and assertiveness. Applying 1920s Palettes Across Design Disciplines These versatile color combinations can enhance projects across multiple design fields: Digital Design The high contrast and distinctive color relationships in 1920s palettes translate surprisingly well to screen-based media. I’ve used the Speakeasy Shadows palette for an immersive storytelling website with excellent results – the deep, rich tones created an engaging experience that kept users exploring. Environmental Design The architectural roots of Art Deco make these palettes natural choices for interior and environmental design. The Champagne & Charcoal palette has been my go-to for creating sophisticated retail environments that feel both contemporary and connected to design history. Fashion & Textile Design The cyclical nature of fashion means that 1920s color stories regularly find their way back into contemporary wardrobes. The Flapper Chic palette continues to inform collections that balance playfulness with sophistication, especially for eveningwear and special occasions. Product Design The bold geometry and distinctive color schemes of the 1920s can transform ordinary objects into conversation pieces. I recently collaborated on a kitchenware collection using the Gatsby Glamour palette – the combination of black, gold, ivory, and crimson elevated simple forms into luxury items. Conclusion: Embracing Timeless Elegance As we navigate the complex visual landscape of 2025, there’s something reassuring about connecting with the refined aesthetics of the past. The 1920s represented a pivotal moment in design history when tradition and innovation converged to create something truly distinctive. By incorporating these eight elegant color palettes into your work, you’re not simply borrowing from history – you’re participating in an ongoing conversation about how we express values like luxury, progress, and sophistication through color. Whether you’re designing a website, creating a brand identity, or reimagining an interior space, these timeless combinations offer a solid foundation that can be adapted to countless contemporary contexts. The enduring appeal of 1920s aesthetics proves that truly exceptional design transcends its era to become something timeless. So go ahead – let the elegance and boldness of the Jazz Age inspire your next creative endeavor. Your work will be all the richer for it. Preston Lee Preston Lee is a graphic and web designer who grew up drawing, painting, and building with Lego. Okay, let's face it: he still does all of those things. But now, he gets paid to design websites, design graphics, write, and do all kinds of creative things. His advice has been featured by Entrepreneur, Inc, Forbes, Adobe, and many more. How Fonts Influence Tone and Clarity in Animated VideosAudiences interact differently with messages based on which fonts designers choose to use within a text presentation. Fonts shape how...30 Stamp Fonts for a Crafty, Handmade FeelThere’s something incredibly satisfying about the texture and character of a stamped impression. As a graphic designer who’s spent countless...30 Monoline Fonts That Create Clean, Consistent Designs in 2025I’ve noticed monoline fonts taking center stage across branding, web design, and print materials in . There’s something undeniably elegant...
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  • BEYOND Expo 2025 Wants to Transform Uncertainty Into A Trigger for Innovation

    It already feels like BEYOND Expo 2024 wrapped just yesterday – with its sprawling exhibition halls, a kaleidoscope of cutting-edge tech, and buzzwords ricocheting off every panel discussion. But here we are again, prepping for the return of Asia’s premier tech pilgrimage. BEYOND Expo 2025 is officially on the calendar: May 21 to 24, 2025, hosted once more at the Venetian Macao Cotai Expo. The theme? “Unveiling Possibilities”, a theme that’s perfect for today’s fast-paced world. In the face of uncertainties, BEYOND Expo aims to unveil possibilities – for progress, innovation, and trade.
    BEYOND has earned its stripes as the central node for startups, unicorns, Fortune 500s, and future-first thinkers who know how to speak fluent AI, blockchain, biotech, and green tech without breaking a sweat. The numbers speak volumes – 2024 clocked in with 820 companies and 20,000+ attendees, including 35% international guests and a surprisingly welcome 30% female participation. For 2025, organizers are aiming for a 40% international exhibitor share out of 1,200 participating companies.
    Click Here to know more about the BEYOND Expo 2025

    At the core of the event are its signature exhibition areas: ConsumerTech, ClimateTech, and Healthcare. Each zone is a hands-on, immersion-heavy playground. Think smart wearables alongside AI-driven diagnostics. Carbon-neutral power systems sharing floor space with next-gen mobility. Everything here feels like it was prototyped in the year 2030.
    You’ll find familiar titles like the Global Investment Summit, where deal-making isn’t whispered in back rooms but happens in pitch sessions like “FUND AT FIRST PITCH,” which matched 150 startups with 100 VCs in 2024. ConsumerTech, ClimateTech, and Healthcare Summits bring vertical-specific depth, while the Asia-Latam, Asia-Euro, and ORIGIN: Asia forums spotlight the unique tech tensions and opportunities across regional ecosystems. Even the SheTech Summit returns to amplify global female innovation, alongside the wealth-centric BEYOND Wealth Summit and founder-focused Founder Forum.

    The opening day is expected to pull heavyweight speakers offering deep industry insight, while the closing event is a hybrid of TED Talk and cultural carnival. Expect keynote wisdom, the BEYOND Awards spotlighting future-forward solutions across four categories, and yes, the kind of nightlife Macao’s reputation thrives on – food markets, yoga pop-ups, eSports showdowns, and likely another charity poker faceoff.
    This year’s narrative, “Unveiling Possibilities,” signals a commitment to embracing chaos, using innovation as a counterweight to uncertainty. BEYOND 2025 sees volatility as a resource, not a risk. And in an age where tech cycles shift faster than government policies, that mindset feels appropriately radical.

    The backdrop of Macao – cosmopolitan, cross-cultural, and geographically strategic – makes it the ideal launchpad for ideas that refuse to stay regional. If you’re a founder, investor, engineer, or just someone who geeks out at the thought of tech’s bleeding edge, blocking those dates now might be the smartest calendar move you’ll make in 2025.
    Registration links for Super Early Bird passes are already live. Exhibition slots are filling. Whether you’re showcasing a product or seeking the next one to bet on, BEYOND Expo 2025 promises both visibility as well as momentum.The post BEYOND Expo 2025 Wants to Transform Uncertainty Into A Trigger for Innovation first appeared on Yanko Design.
    #beyond #expo #wants #transform #uncertainty
    BEYOND Expo 2025 Wants to Transform Uncertainty Into A Trigger for Innovation
    It already feels like BEYOND Expo 2024 wrapped just yesterday – with its sprawling exhibition halls, a kaleidoscope of cutting-edge tech, and buzzwords ricocheting off every panel discussion. But here we are again, prepping for the return of Asia’s premier tech pilgrimage. BEYOND Expo 2025 is officially on the calendar: May 21 to 24, 2025, hosted once more at the Venetian Macao Cotai Expo. The theme? “Unveiling Possibilities”, a theme that’s perfect for today’s fast-paced world. In the face of uncertainties, BEYOND Expo aims to unveil possibilities – for progress, innovation, and trade. BEYOND has earned its stripes as the central node for startups, unicorns, Fortune 500s, and future-first thinkers who know how to speak fluent AI, blockchain, biotech, and green tech without breaking a sweat. The numbers speak volumes – 2024 clocked in with 820 companies and 20,000+ attendees, including 35% international guests and a surprisingly welcome 30% female participation. For 2025, organizers are aiming for a 40% international exhibitor share out of 1,200 participating companies. Click Here to know more about the BEYOND Expo 2025 At the core of the event are its signature exhibition areas: ConsumerTech, ClimateTech, and Healthcare. Each zone is a hands-on, immersion-heavy playground. Think smart wearables alongside AI-driven diagnostics. Carbon-neutral power systems sharing floor space with next-gen mobility. Everything here feels like it was prototyped in the year 2030. You’ll find familiar titles like the Global Investment Summit, where deal-making isn’t whispered in back rooms but happens in pitch sessions like “FUND AT FIRST PITCH,” which matched 150 startups with 100 VCs in 2024. ConsumerTech, ClimateTech, and Healthcare Summits bring vertical-specific depth, while the Asia-Latam, Asia-Euro, and ORIGIN: Asia forums spotlight the unique tech tensions and opportunities across regional ecosystems. Even the SheTech Summit returns to amplify global female innovation, alongside the wealth-centric BEYOND Wealth Summit and founder-focused Founder Forum. The opening day is expected to pull heavyweight speakers offering deep industry insight, while the closing event is a hybrid of TED Talk and cultural carnival. Expect keynote wisdom, the BEYOND Awards spotlighting future-forward solutions across four categories, and yes, the kind of nightlife Macao’s reputation thrives on – food markets, yoga pop-ups, eSports showdowns, and likely another charity poker faceoff. This year’s narrative, “Unveiling Possibilities,” signals a commitment to embracing chaos, using innovation as a counterweight to uncertainty. BEYOND 2025 sees volatility as a resource, not a risk. And in an age where tech cycles shift faster than government policies, that mindset feels appropriately radical. The backdrop of Macao – cosmopolitan, cross-cultural, and geographically strategic – makes it the ideal launchpad for ideas that refuse to stay regional. If you’re a founder, investor, engineer, or just someone who geeks out at the thought of tech’s bleeding edge, blocking those dates now might be the smartest calendar move you’ll make in 2025. Registration links for Super Early Bird passes are already live. Exhibition slots are filling. Whether you’re showcasing a product or seeking the next one to bet on, BEYOND Expo 2025 promises both visibility as well as momentum.The post BEYOND Expo 2025 Wants to Transform Uncertainty Into A Trigger for Innovation first appeared on Yanko Design. #beyond #expo #wants #transform #uncertainty
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    BEYOND Expo 2025 Wants to Transform Uncertainty Into A Trigger for Innovation
    It already feels like BEYOND Expo 2024 wrapped just yesterday – with its sprawling exhibition halls, a kaleidoscope of cutting-edge tech, and buzzwords ricocheting off every panel discussion. But here we are again, prepping for the return of Asia’s premier tech pilgrimage. BEYOND Expo 2025 is officially on the calendar: May 21 to 24, 2025, hosted once more at the Venetian Macao Cotai Expo. The theme? “Unveiling Possibilities”, a theme that’s perfect for today’s fast-paced world. In the face of uncertainties, BEYOND Expo aims to unveil possibilities – for progress, innovation, and trade. BEYOND has earned its stripes as the central node for startups, unicorns, Fortune 500s, and future-first thinkers who know how to speak fluent AI, blockchain, biotech, and green tech without breaking a sweat. The numbers speak volumes – 2024 clocked in with 820 companies and 20,000+ attendees, including 35% international guests and a surprisingly welcome 30% female participation. For 2025, organizers are aiming for a 40% international exhibitor share out of 1,200 participating companies. Click Here to know more about the BEYOND Expo 2025 At the core of the event are its signature exhibition areas: ConsumerTech, ClimateTech, and Healthcare. Each zone is a hands-on, immersion-heavy playground. Think smart wearables alongside AI-driven diagnostics. Carbon-neutral power systems sharing floor space with next-gen mobility. Everything here feels like it was prototyped in the year 2030. You’ll find familiar titles like the Global Investment Summit, where deal-making isn’t whispered in back rooms but happens in pitch sessions like “FUND AT FIRST PITCH,” which matched 150 startups with 100 VCs in 2024. ConsumerTech, ClimateTech, and Healthcare Summits bring vertical-specific depth, while the Asia-Latam, Asia-Euro, and ORIGIN: Asia forums spotlight the unique tech tensions and opportunities across regional ecosystems. Even the SheTech Summit returns to amplify global female innovation, alongside the wealth-centric BEYOND Wealth Summit and founder-focused Founder Forum. The opening day is expected to pull heavyweight speakers offering deep industry insight, while the closing event is a hybrid of TED Talk and cultural carnival. Expect keynote wisdom, the BEYOND Awards spotlighting future-forward solutions across four categories, and yes, the kind of nightlife Macao’s reputation thrives on – food markets, yoga pop-ups, eSports showdowns, and likely another charity poker faceoff. This year’s narrative, “Unveiling Possibilities,” signals a commitment to embracing chaos, using innovation as a counterweight to uncertainty. BEYOND 2025 sees volatility as a resource, not a risk. And in an age where tech cycles shift faster than government policies, that mindset feels appropriately radical. The backdrop of Macao – cosmopolitan, cross-cultural, and geographically strategic – makes it the ideal launchpad for ideas that refuse to stay regional. If you’re a founder, investor, engineer, or just someone who geeks out at the thought of tech’s bleeding edge, blocking those dates now might be the smartest calendar move you’ll make in 2025. Registration links for Super Early Bird passes are already live. Exhibition slots are filling. Whether you’re showcasing a product or seeking the next one to bet on, BEYOND Expo 2025 promises both visibility as well as momentum.The post BEYOND Expo 2025 Wants to Transform Uncertainty Into A Trigger for Innovation first appeared on Yanko Design.
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