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Thursday, May 24, 2007

Car & Plane Parts Furniture


"QUANTUM SHOT" #190
link



Used cars - for design statement, not transportation

Car parts provide great ideas for interior design. When your old rusty four-wheel monster finally kicks the bucket, you can still salvage some parts for pretty cool furniture pieces. Car Couches is an obvious design combination, which can be quite attractive when used with collectible vehicle parts. At Route66 store you can get many more.

Interior Design

Interior Design

Interior Design

Interior Design

Interior Design

Interior Design

Interior Design

Interior Design

Interior Design

Inspired Design UK offers "Porsche 917" seat:



Here is some weird Russian version, almost a room in itself.
More images here.

Interior Design

Interior Design
(images credit: EnglishRussia.com)

Some amateur effort (from Bits&Pieces, via)

Computers



Now, if you are such a couch potato, but still need to get around for groceries, you can use some of the motorized furniture, which is all the rage today:


(image credit: Mike Mosedale)



Car Desks

Interior Design

Source: Techeblog.com

Mini Traveller "Geneva Concept" (seen here
(click to enlarge)

Interior Design



More after the jump...

Home Decor - Spice up your surroundings!
$1000 Pier One Gift Card for all your home decoration needs





Airplane Parts Furniture

Airplane parts provide even better design statement, more intricate looks and more high-tech feel. In fact, air bombs are the a perfect fit for a bar, for example, which you visit to "get bombed" anyway. Motoart company makes a good use of old collectible parts, see many examples at the site's gallery.

Bomber wing tables:
Interior Design

Interior Design

Radial Engine Table:
Interior Design

WWII Navy practice bomb and B-52 jet engine turbine fan:
Interior Design

Douglas DC-6 Cowling Desk:
Interior Design

Conference table:
Interior Design

And perhaps, best of all - Ejection Office Chair:

"Don't like what you're hearing in the office? Pull the lever and abort with Motoart's B-52 Ejection Chair"

Interior Design

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Avi Abrams
Rachel Abrams
M. Christian
Simon Rose
Paul Schilperoord
Scott Seegert
Constantine vonHoffman

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  • What an interesting article. Imagine how different things could have been.
    Read more

  • These concerns surprisingly gained a lot of weight in the government...

    "Surprisingly"..? Have you actually looked at the results of the sonic boom testing done at Oklahoma City in early 1964, and at White Sands later that year? We're not talking fuzzy green Luddite environmentalism here... we're talking what the FAA and Boeing concluded would be millions in payments for physical damages per overland flight.
    Read more

  • The article misses the fact that Concorde did indeed fly successfully and accident free for a great many years.
    The TU144 was a great triumph both of soviet ingenuity, and soviet espionage, incorporating much of concorde's design.
    Whilst a Concorde is in a museum in Seattle it is far from being the only one preserved.
    One is at Filton, near Bristol, England, from where the first proving flights took off.
    Truth is, Concorde was a triumph that worked, first flying in 1969, in service 1976, and continuing until late 2003. An airliner that flew higher and faster than any other, ever.
    Whereas the Boeing SST was a pipedream that never materialised.
    Read more

  • The interest of the governments may not have been as benign as the article implies. There is a story that - as a test - they once flew a Concorde out over the Norwegian Sea then had it cruise back over Britain at its normal height and speed, just to see how easy it would be to intercept. The answer was that it wasn't. It flew too high and too fast for anything in the UK to get to it before it had flown right across the country.

    The noise problem was BAD. I used to work at Heathrow and many the time I stood outside Hatton Cross (tube) station as Concorde climbed into the sky. There was a longterm carpark between the station and the runway, which meant that Concorde passed over that even lower, and as the rumble of the plane died away you could always hear the blaring of the horns of the cars - their theft alarms triggered by the vibration. I often used to wonder how many travellers parked in there and got back to find that - for some unknown, to them, reason - their car batteries were flat.

    Beautiful plane though!
    Read more

  • soubriquet said:
    "The TU144 was a great triumph both of soviet ingenuity, and soviet espionage, incorporating much of concorde's design."

    May be Concordes' design was stolen from USSR? Tu-144 has it's first flight 2 months earlier.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tupolev_Tu-144

    "However, even if this were to be confirmed, the documents were early development plans and would not have permitted the USSR's engineers to come up with their own aircraft; the plans could only serve as a general indication of the work of the Concorde design team. Moreover, Soviet aircraft designers in the 1960s had significant experience building delta-shaped aircraft, which proved an efficient means of achieving Mach 2, and TsAGI, of which Andrei Tupolev was a graduate, had developed extensive data about such designs."

    Learn history, lamer!
    Read more

  • It's sad that the Concorde is out of service, and that these airplanes not even got to fly...
    Read more

  • Yeah, yeah. I'll believe the US can build a craft comparable to Concorde when I see it build a V/STOL plane that isn't 100% craptacular (especially when compared to my country's brilliant AV-8B Harrier). Until then, forgive me for thinking that you're way out of your league here.
    Read more

  • Pfft. It's all about undersea magnetic trains these days.
    Read more

  • Dear friends:
    I uploaded some pictures of the SST Museum that my father took during our trip to Florida the summer of 1976.
    Hope you enjoy them, the link is: http://www.flickr.com/photos/8767849@N07/sets/72157618299890370/



    I will be uploading more pictures of the SST Museum soon !!!!!



    Kind regards from rainy Mexico City.



    Jose Carreno
    Read more

  • Thank you Jose - great contribution!
    Read more

  • All three programmes became surrounded in myth. The soviet 'steal' question was settled some time ago in a British TV documentary when Boing, Concord and Tu./KGB engineers all got together and reminised, their chat then being intercut throughout the telling of the story by narator/camera.

    The ex-Soviets admitted that they had stolen a complete set of plans through the French end of the Concord programe but didn't use much from them as their design was already too advanced (in the process of procurment). The British and French designers looked at Tu blueprints and agreed that there was nothing 'really' Concord about the Tu.

    Another story revolves around the fact that the Americans were so pissed off at A) the success of Concord and B) the cancellation of their own that they spent years not letting C. land at New york or other places useing the noise argument.

    I lived under the flight path of Concord most my early life and still miss her at 11am most days. The roar of those jets was akin to a Bloodhound Missile, Minutman or small satalite launch-vehicle. It was the sound of mens dreams writ large, and sometime in the 80's under Thatcher, Regan, Schmitt and Miterresturant or whatever his name was...we stopped dreaming, the bean counters and grey suits took final control over our destiny and it's all down-hill now...
    Read more

  • Pity they didn't consider the now-booming Asian economy - reducing the miserable trudge over the Pacific would bring in huge profits.
    Read more

  • These have got to be some of the most amazing works of art I've ever seen.
    Read more

  • this seems more like the work of Beksinski, some are just copied and edited a bit... or am i wrong here?
    Read more

  • Beksinski was an absolute master in this type of painting. These ones seem to be just a faint echoes of his works.
    Read more

  • well, maybe they've seen the same strange dimension ;-)
    Read more

  • Ah just a small correction (doesn't really matter), but the ad is for high definition television, not paint.
    Read more

  • alternative way to treat old office equipment: http://www.youtube.com/?v=AQzIg0CPW5Q
    Read more

  • Great entry! Love the alternative uses of old office equipment.
    Read more

  • Love this entry , some great pics I love the apple mailbox! The mouse with teeth is seriously freaky tho *shudder*
    Read more

  • Mr. Chernikov must have held Giovanni Battista Piranesi in incredibly high esteem. (Think the Carceri series.)
    Read more

  • creepy... but also somehow better than the steel & glass boxes blocking the sun
    in my downtown.
    Read more

  • "to play on a field like that:"

    This is in the Olympic Park in Munich, Germany. I never did manage to play on the pitch, but they seem to mark it out like this every now and then!
    Read more

  • "perhaps never to be fully realized" Yes. We were very lucky that it never realized. We would be in a pretty bad shape by now. LOL
    Read more

  • I love cars, and I love Plan 59. This has been one of my favorite posts of yours, ever. I have a '59 fairlane galaxie 500...you just cant beat the styling of the 50's and 60's! Thanks!
    Read more

  • "their outrageous size and engine's unbridled power give off a statement of pure excess"

    True, but many of today's automobiles rival their weight and easily exceed their power. Modern mid-luxury sport sedans are quicker, faster, handle immeasurably better, and are scads safer than their counterparts of yore. We're truly living in a new Golden Age of the Automobile!
    Read more

  • I really wish that the days of those kinds of cars could come back. Who knows, maybe one day when they find something better than oil to fuel cars.
    Read more

  • Darn! And I used to think you were so on the ball! Seriously, before mocking other politicians, have you checked out your George Bush recently? There's no question he considers himself King and his expressions are 1000 times stupider than Putin's!
    Read more

  • Dear Alicia,

    Let me assure you, the thought has crossed my mind. Alas, Good Old Bush's faces can be found in every bookstore; there are wall calendars issued every year. Too obvious. But still... check out "Presidents and Babies" post from December 2006 :)
    Read more

  • I guess you're right (and all politicians suck, anyway).... You're still cool in my book! :-)
    Read more

  • The top serious of pictures needs to add "Murderous."

    Thanks for the slaughter of thousands of Chechens, Putin, not to mention the Slaughter of free speech in your country.

    RIP Anna Politkovskaya
    Read more

  • I think you mean to blame Yeltsin for the Chechens Jess

    Damn him for killing those people, that were trying to kill his people

    Free speech is relative and a loaded privilege that idiots abuse for their own personal fame and gain

    Think of all the things you cannot say in any free society... the list is endless

    Remember Jess, there are two sides to every coin
    Read more


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