Umbra (housewares Company)
History
The firm was founded in 1978 by childhood friends Les Mandelbaum and Paul Rowan. The firm opened its first store in Toronto's Queen West District in 2007. Production is mainly done in China. It has retail stores in the United Kingdom, Luxembourg, China, Israel, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates, Mexico, Hong Kong, South Korea, Japan, the Philippines, Malaysia, and Singapore, and the Umbra and Umbra Shift e-commerce websites. Umbra products are also sold through other retailers.
Umbra Concept Store
The Umbra Store is located north of Queen Street West at 165 John Street within the downtown core of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
The building was constructed for the Umbra design company in 2007 to a design by Kohn Shnier Architects. The building has translucent bright pink vertical bands that wrap a glass structure positioned on the corner of a side street, surrounded by monotone brick construction. In comparison to the surrounding architecture the building is considerably smaller. The building is three stories tall. The overall axis of the structure is predominantly vertical with a centralized plan. The building in plan is a rectangle with a smaller rectangle offset to the middle that is positioned off center towards the main elevation.
Awards
- 2008 Retail Store Design Award by the Retail Council of Canada.
Designs
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Umbra has an in-house design team headed by Matt Carr, consisting of over 30 designers in Canada and abroad. Many independent designers have also collaborated with the firm. Notable ones who have made significant contributions to Umbra include Karim Rashid, Hlynur Atlason, and Harry Allen.
In 1996, Umbra teamed up with Rashid to create what would become one of the company’s most well-known products; the GARBO trash can. The wastebasket was named after actress Greta Garbo, mimicking the shape of her body. It sold more than two million units within the first two years of production and continues to sell today in a miniature version, GARBINO. It was donated to the Brooklyn Museum in 1999 and added into the permanent collection at the Museum of Modern Art in 2000. In 1997, it earned the Chicago Athenaeum Good Design Award.
Rashid also designed the OH Chair for Umbra; a "scoop" of plastic, making use of negative space, modeled into a chair. These chairs are still in the firm's catalogue today.
Umbra Shift
Umbra Shift is a brand extension of Umbra that utilizes higher end materials and different production techniques. The products are sold through the independent retailers and the Umbra Shift website.
Honors
- 1997 Good Design Award at the Chicago Athenaeum Museum – Garbino
- 1998 Best Design Strategy Award at the Design Effectiveness Awards
- 1999 IDEA Award – The Oh Chair
- 1999 Best Collection Award at the New York Accent on Design Show
- 1999 Good Design Award at the Chicago Athenaeum Museum – Juxta, Suma, Tri, Jumbo, bi, and Rim Bowls, Slip Shoe Horn
- 1999 Brooklyn Museum of Art – Garbino
- 1999 Permanent SF MOMA Objects, San Francisco – OH Chair
- 2000 Permanent Collection The Museum of Modern Art, NYC, Dept. of Architecture & Design – Garbo
- 2001 Premier’s Award for Outstanding Achievement from the colleges of Ontario – Paul Rowan
- 2003 Good Design Award at the Chicago Athenaeum Museum – Bungee Card Case
- 2006 Housewares Design Award – The Magino Stool
- 2006 Pratt Institute Winner – Conceal Shelf
- 2010 Housewares Design Award International Homewares Association – Fish Hotel
- 2010 Les Mandelbaum and Paul Rowan inducted into the Canadian Marketing Hall of Legends as Visionaries
- 2011 International Forum Product Design Award – Penguin Soap Pump
- 2014 ICFF Editors Award for Best Accessories – Umbra Shift
- 2014 Paul Rowan appointed to the Board of the International Housewares Association
- 2016 Les Mandelbaum awarded EY's 'Entrepreneur of the Year' Consumer Products Category
Sources
- Stanwick, Sean; Flores, Jennifer (2007), Design city Toronto, Interior angles, Chichester, pp. 211–219, ISBN 0-470-03316-9
- Goodfellow, Margaret; Goodfellow, Phil (2010), A guidebook to contemporary architecture in Toronto, Vancouver, pp. 45–48, 103–104, ISBN 1-55365-444-7
- Umbra Inc. U + Studio Collection 2001. vo. 1. Toronto, On: Umbra, 2001. 83 – 96.
References
- ^ Vicky Sanderson (February 12, 2015). "Canada's Umbra celebrates 35 big years of small design with reinvented Queen W. flagship store". Toronto Star. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
- ^ "Shop Modern Home Décor - Free Shipping Over $50". Umbra. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
- ^ Drolet, Daniel. “Umbra proves flagship stores still have their place.” Canwest News Service 19 Jul. 2008: D3.
- ^ Davidson, Hilary (2009), Frommer's Toronto 2010, Frommer's, p. 187, ISBN 978-0-470-54126-5
- ^ "UMBRA Retail and Concept Store, Editorial, world architecture news, architecture jobs". Worldarchitecturenews.com. 2008-01-03. Retrieved 2010-10-18.
- ^ "kohn shnier architects". kohn shnier architects. Retrieved 2010-10-18.
- ^ "Umbra proves flagship stores still have their place". The Vancouver Sun. 2008-07-19. Retrieved 2010-10-18.
- ^ "Karim Rashid". karimrashid.com. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
- ^ "Garbino Can Silver". www.umbra.com. Design Is This. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
- ^ "Oh Chair Jasmine". www.umbra.com. Send A Frame. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
- ^ Misha Volf (January 19, 2016). "Karim Rashid's Garbo at 20: Does It Still Hold Up?". Metropolis. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
- ^ "Bungee Card Case Black". Tami Shop. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
- ^ "Conceal Book Shelf Large Silver". Umbra. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
- ^ "Penguin Soap Pump Nickel". Umbra. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
- ^ "ICFF Editors Awards 2014 honor top interior design products". FMLink. 2014-06-06. Retrieved 2024-02-23.
- ^ "Ontario's most disruptive and innovative entrepreneurs named finalists of the EY Entrepreneur Of The Year™ program". Toronto: Ernst & Young. July 6, 2016. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
External links
Media related to Umbra Concept Store at Wikimedia Commons