This week on Dezeen
This week we've been reporting on the latest from Design Miami 2014, including Studio Job's "whacked and expressive" furniture pieces, a bike designed for urban commuters and a neon-tubed light installation (pictured). Read on for more architecture and design highlights, plus our featured track of the week.
Filtered is a funky house track by German producer PhonkworX released by Hanover-based label Wildtrackin.
Listen to more original music on Dezeen »
Spanish architects José Selgas and Lucía Cano were named as the designers of next year's Serpentine Gallery Pavilion, and we looked at the key projects designed by the duo – including an office located in a woodland.
In a surprising move, the Guggenheim named six emerging architects as the finalists in its Helsinki competition, and less surprisingly, Thomas Heatherwick's Garden Bridge over the River Thames got the planning approval it needed to move forward.
Zaha Hadid unveiled new designs for road-side advertising and Bjarke Ingels released his competition-winning public square design for London's Battersea Power Station.
In other news, Dundee was named as the UK's first UNESCO City of Design and we reported on the world's ten most expensive skyscrapers.
Popular projects this week included a table covered in plants that disappear as visitors approach, a cave-like cabin situated beside a Norwegian lake and a simple rack designed to show off bicycles.
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