Sonos Listening Library and SCALE for Noho Design District Festival at The Standard, East Village

  • Location:
    The Standard East Village, 25 Cooper Square, New York, New York, 10003, US

SONOS Listening Library
The Sonos Listening Library, located at The Standard East Village, is a custom space debuting one-of-a-kind furniture and design pieces along with Sonos home audio speakers to create the optimal, high-quality music listening experience. The focal point will be a custom Sonos "Soundalier" created by Kiel Mead and Lindsey Adelman. The "Soundalier" utilizes Adelman's contemporary iron chandeliers with the lighting replaced by Sonos' Play: 3 wireless speakers. Suspended above the custom designed room, the sound from above creates an unparalleled listening experience.

Other designers and studios showcasing work include: Brendan Kiem, Taylor Mckenzie-Veal, Evan Dublin, Peter Oyler, Brendan Timmins, Tim Richartz, Ashira Isreal, Reed Wilson, Henry Julier, Ian Geoghegan, Michael Cummings, Hästens Beds with work from The Future Perfect.

SCALE presented by Cool Hunting, Architizer and Dwell
A curated collection of objects that explore the relationship between architecture and furniture, at the scale of a chair.

Online tastemakers Cool Hunting and Architizer join forces with Dwell magazine to curate a collection of objects that explore the relationship between architecture and furniture. The pieces speak to a new generation of architects who are testing radical ideas about materiality, computation, and fabrication — all at the scale of a chair. Featuring furniture, objects and prototypes by Snarkitecture, Drura Parrish, Jonah Takagi, Patrick Gavin, Seth Alec Keller, Thaddeus Wolfe, Bec Brittain, Studio Dror and more.

Architecture is seldom just about walls, floors and ceilings — it’s also about the pieces that fill those spaces and define how they are used. The collection will be on display at the The Standard, East Village as part of the Noho Design District. The collected pieces, on view from May 18th to 21st, speak to a young generation of architects who are testing radical ideas about materiality, computation, and fabrication—all at the scale of the chair.