APPLE’S CULVER CITY
HEADQUARTERS
CULVER CITY, USA
WORKPLACE
CLUNY HILL HOUSE
SINGAPORE
RESIDENTIAL
Project: Apple’s Culver City Headquarters
8777 Washington Blvd
Location: Culver City, CA
Architect: Gensler
Lighting Designer: KGM
Architect: Wallflower Architects
Lighting designer: Light Collab
MONTEFELTRO OFFICE VILLAGE
MILAN, ITALY
LIGHT FACADE
Project Team:
Stefano Giubileo, Gregg Brodarick,
Andrea Bianchi, Fabio Crespi
Rubber by Inter-lux/Linea Light transforms the exterior of Apple's
headquarters in Culver City by adding an eye-catching detail to the
sides of the building.
Linea Light offers a wide range of high-performance LED luminaires and
systems characterised by functionality, style and design. Architectural
applications include recessed and surface options; Rubber is just one
of Linea Light's infinite lighting solutions, characterised by a variety of
strip solutions with flexible adhesive circuits suitable for humid places
and a polyurethane resin diffuser that creates perfectly uniform lines
of light. Extremely flexible, it can bend to cover a very narrow radius,
adapting perfectly to sinuous profiles.
A house mirrored in the swimming pool.
Our lighting concept enhances the lines and reflections of the water.
Uncompromising lighting, like that of the Cluny Hill House project.
With its orthogonal shape, flat roof and raised first floor that seems to
"float" above the swimming pool, Cluny Hill House seeks and finds its
space in the contemporary era and in the future.
A welcoming home, which never goes unnoticed, neither in sunlight nor
at night, illuminated by the unmistakable style of Linea Light: Rubber
3D Optic black finish that illuminates the facade, Blum that illuminates
a flower bed, Orma_IJ to illuminate the lower part of the structure and
finally Beret, chosen to highlight some niches inside the house.
The recently completed restyling project of the Montefeltro Office Village
complex in Milan used light as the characterising element of its facades.
The ability of the Rubber 3D LED strip to play with three-dimensionality
made it possible to give the building an image of robustness.
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