Design 2020: What is in store?
Wow, 2020 is here. As a kid, I always thought that by now we’d all be living in pristine highrises with flying-saucer cars and robot maids named Rosie, a la “The Jetsons” comic.
The future always seems distant and full of uncertainties, but you can see how close we have come to our visions of the future.
In 2020, there are daring high-rises such as
Zaha Hadid’s One Thousand Museum tower in Miami, which features an exoskeletal structure, or Oma’s Norra Tornen in Stockholm, which features a modular precast stacked structure with wide spans of plate glass and terraces with heartstopping views.
Not to mention there are self- driving cars and buses, and the convenience of programmable sweeping devices named Roomba. The future is here.
Just as art deco of the roaring 20s was aesthetically impacted by the development of cars, cruise ships and industrialization, you can see how technology and computerization has begun to impact design in function and style.
Now you can program lights to turn on and off, adjust air conditioning temperatures, get recipes from our smart devices, raise and lower window coverings, and even draw a hot bath so it’s at the perfect temperature when you get home.
Aesthetically, influenced by the designs of our phones and tablets, architecture and interior designs are drastically more minimal than in the past.
Whenever possible, people have started to prefer things that are less cluttered. It will be interesting to see how this evolves and makes for comfortable or warm home environments.
Here are some tips to keep your interiors up to date:
• The 2020 Pantone shade is Classic Blue, which is soft and alludes to the color of the sky on a clear day. It’s inoffensive and people-pleasing.
• Another color to be seen this year is green in all hues, including hunter green, bottle green, forest green, gray-green, bronzegreen and the very bright emerald green.
• Although gray is elegant and has been the preferred neutral for interiors for the last five years, 2020 brings a shift to earthier tones and all shades of browns and beiges. These tried-andtrue colors of the past are lurking to make a comeback as the new neutrals.
• As a counterpoint to our futuristic preferences, antiques are slowly making a comeback. Millennials, tired of seeing the same type of furnishings everywhere they go, are making a turn to unique handmade furniture and are seeing the value of investing in now-affordable antiques.
• Black and white is a classic color combination that has strength based on opposition and contrast. The trick to this yin-yang approach is to allow one color to be predominant over the other. Trying to balance both as equals leads to disaster.
• Maximalism is making a comeback in a fresh way. Unlike a cluttered room from the Victorian era, maximalism creates a dialogue against stark backgrounds.
An example: Think of an over-the-top collection of art juxtaposed with a minimalist couch and cocktail table. Joseph Pubillones is the owner of Joseph Pubillones Interiors, an award-winning interior design firm based in Palm Beach, Florida.