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Pentagram

Pentagram

Teach for America Headquarters

Environmental graphics for the organization that recruits teachers for underserved communities throughout the United States.

The lobby wall is made of wood reclaimed from high school bleacher seats.
An inlaid video display greets visitors at the entrance.
Each donor table contains 240 individually stamped pencils arranged in a circle.
The 240 yellow, red, and natural-colored pencils are individually stamped with the names of donors.

Conference rooms throughout the headquarters are named after regional offices, and the doors to the room are outfitted with silkscreen-printed chalkboard panels with statistical information about each location.

The portraits of corps members and students wrap around the three-story stairwell.
Conference room doors are printed with silkscreened chalkboard panels.
Dimensional logo wall.
A TFA employee pins a portrait to the logo.
Logo wall detail.
Oversized magnets in the pantry derive language from TFA's core values.
Team members can create their own messages with the magnets.
A silkscreened Scrabble board offers a playful break from the workspace.
Silkscreened maple tiles follow the exact specs of the classic board game.
Hanging pendant lamps above the IT desk.
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Retrospective: London Design Festival

London Design Festival has been an annual celebration of the power of creativity for over 20 years. Since 2008, Pentagram partner Domenic Lippa has served as the LDF’s creative director, responsible every September for the design of a new visual identity. By inventively remixing a few key elements — typography, a signature red (“the colour of London”), and LDF's simple monogram — the program unifies hundreds of events while reaffirming London’s status as a global design capital.
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Retrospective: London Design Festival

London Design Festival has been an annual celebration of the power of creativity for over 20 years. Since 2008, Pentagram partner Domenic Lippa has served as the LDF’s creative director, responsible every September for the design of a new visual identity. By inventively remixing a few key elements — typography, a signature red (“the colour of London”), and LDF's simple monogram — the program unifies hundreds of events while reaffirming London’s status as a global design capital.