"I love fresh ideas about everything". Adriana Siso founded her contemporary industrial design store in 2002 in Santa Fe, NM. With a background in Fine Arts, Adriana has been an innovator, bringing to the Santa Fe area, original and unique industrial design products by some of the most creative design firms in the world.
The first design partners Molecule worked with were Vitra Design Museum, Moooi, Cherner Chair, and other well-known national and international brands. Today it partners with other world-class manufacturers like Vondom, Loll Designs and Moroso.
Molecule operated out of a recycled and renovated shipping container building, the first of its kind in Santa Fe. Currently Molecule is available through the online store and by appointment.
Sustainability is an important area of interest and ongoing exploration for Molecule, which offers product lines with a focus on conservation and ecological stewardship. A recent alliance with the Vertical Aeroponic Growing System – Tower Garden, promises to offer a lot of inspiration in the growing field of aeroponics as the future of agriculture, industrial design at its best.
January 07, 2010, |by Kyung Lah, CNN
Satoshi Miura crawled into his rented room, dropping his bag in the corner. It didn’t take long to get settled — home tonight is a capsule. The rooms are boxes in this capsule hotel about the size of a coffin.
But no matter, says 45-year-old Miura. He’s only there to sleep before looking for work.
For Miura, it has everything he needs for the night: a bed, a TV, and a radio. On the ground floor, there’s a shared bath and sauna.
Most importantly, it’s cheap. The capsules cost about $30 a night. If he had to stay for a month, it would cost $700 to $1000, a housing bargain in Tokyo, ranked by Mercer as the world’s most expensive city.
The cost is why capsule hotels are finding a new resident: the working poor. Once a symbol of Japan’s prosperity, the capsules were built for the businessman who worked too late to catch the train or stayed out drinking all night. At Miura’s capsule hotel this night, there are no successful businessmen renting capsules. Only men like him, people looking for work.
Miura snapped his mobile phone shut, saying he’d just gotten some good news. His temp agency has set him up with a bookbinding job the next day, which will pay him about $70. That’s enough, Miura says, to buy him another night indoors and fast food dinner. It’s a cycle Miura has been on for some time. He’s been working steadily since he was 18, primarily in construction jobs.
Despite that, he can’t afford the deposit on an apartment, which is usually thousands of dollars upfront. Japan’s recession last year made finding work even tougher. Japan’s corporations laid off thousands of temporary, part-time workers. These workers, who make up a third of Japan’s workforce, have fewer legal protections than full-time employees. When those temporary workers got fired, says Makoto Kawazoe of the Young Worker’s Union, they lost their homes.
“When people lose their jobs in Japan, they fall into poverty immediately,” says Kawazoe. “Rents are extremely expensive. Due to the lack of affordable housing, underpaid laborers can’t rent a room. They end up homeless, even if they’re working.”
Japan’s new prime minister, Yukio Hatoyama, went to visit a government-run shelter in the New Year. The shelter opened for a week, to help laborers who can’t find a place to stay during the holidays.
“I want everyone in Japan to have basic living rights guaranteed by our Constitution,” the prime minister said in his New Year’s address to the nation. “People want a place to live, they wish to work, but there’s nowhere to work. I want to build a government this year that supports workers and protects their lives.”
The emergence of the working poor in the world’s second-largest economy has shocked a public used to the image of a rich and egalitarian nation with lifetime employment for its workers. The latest figures from the government reported a 15.7 percent poverty rate. Compared to other industrialized nations, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development says Japan ranks fourth, behind Mexico, Turkey, and the United States.
“Japan is not a rich country,” says Miura. “There are rich and poor and a great gap between.”
The first capsule hotel to open was the Capsule Inn Osaka, designed by Kisho Kurokawa and located in the Umeda district of Osaka. It opened in 1979.