{"id":198681,"date":"2022-07-13T09:57:37","date_gmt":"2022-07-13T13:57:37","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/interiordesign.net\/?post_type=id_news&p=198681"},"modified":"2022-10-25T15:08:53","modified_gmt":"2022-10-25T19:08:53","slug":"the-1960s-celebrating-90-years-of-design","status":"publish","type":"id_news","link":"https:\/\/interiordesign.net\/designwire\/the-1960s-celebrating-90-years-of-design\/","title":{"rendered":"The 1960s: Celebrating 90 Years of Design"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
July 13, 2022<\/p>\n\n\n
Words: <\/span>Stanley Abercrombie<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n\n\n\n In Copenhagen, Arne Jacobsen builds and furnishes the SAS Royal Hotel in 1960. The next year, Jack Lenor Larsen introduces stretch fabric, and Salone del Mobile debuts in Milan. In 1962, Eero Saarinen & Associates completes Idlewild Airport’s TWA Terminal. Mario Bellini begins consulting for companies such as Cassina and Olivetti in Italy in 1963; back in the U.S., Billy Baldwin redesigns New York’s Tiffany & Co., and the Interior Design Educators Council formed. Davis Allen of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill completes Hawaii’s Maui Kea Beach Hotel in 1965. The decade’s premier book of theory, Robert Venturi’s Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture, comes out in 1966, the same year Art Gensler<\/a> opens his namesake firm in San Francisco. In 1967, New York City’s Ford Foundation interiors by Roche & Dinkeloo’s Warren Platner, and Billy Baldwin win designs the Onassis villa in Skorpios, Greece. The first NeoCon (National Exhibition of Contract Furnishings) is held in Chicago in 1969.<\/p>\n\n\n\nThe 1960s: Celebrating 90 Years of Design<\/h1>\n\n\n\n