Heading to Ikea to pick out furniture sounds fun, but can be taxing. So imagine having to pick out 26,000 pieces of furniture.
That was the (recently completed) task faced by the city of Toronto:
The city's $1-billion contract with Montreal-based Astral Media Inc., with 26,000 pieces to be installed over the next 20 years, is the "largest private-public partnership in the history of Canada," according to Mayor David Miller, who added that it is also the "largest street furniture contract of its kind in Canada."
So, "street furniture," what does that mean? We're talking bus shelters, benches, bicycle posts, garbage bins, information kiosks, newspaper boxes, and a self-cleaning, wheelchair-accessible public toilet system that rings in at $300,000 a pop.
While some city councilmen are understandably psyched about the facelift, others are cautious:
...the chairman of the industrial design program at the Ontario College of Art and Design said "it remains to be seen how effective the street furniture works when it is built into the urban landscape."
They'd better hope it works well; I've tried returning a couch at Ikea and can't imagine multiplying the process by 26,000.
MILAN DESIGN WEEK 2009
PICTOPIA FESTIVAL 2009
HOME AND HOUSEWARES SHOW 2009
TRANSVERSALE 2009
NEW YORK CITY TOY FAIR 2009
IMM COLOGNE INTERNATIONAL FURNISHING SHOW
NORTH AMERICAN INT'L AUTO SHOW '09
TOKYO DESIGN WEEK 2008
LONDON DESIGN FESTIVAL 2008
NeoCon 2009
Bread and Butter Berlin
Same, Same but Different: DMY 2009
Tools of Engagement
Comments
Your last sentence really made me laugh out loud. =)