
DENNIS VANDERBROECK
Spatial Designer
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On Crafting Spaces, Collaboration, and Personal Balance
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Dennis Vanderbroeck is a spatial designer known for his visually striking and hyper-aesthetic work that spans theatre, fine art, fashion, and music. With collaborations across iconic brands like DIESEL and Palais de Tokyo, Dennis focuses on creating spaces that evoke dialogue and engage visitors deeply.
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In this episode, Dennis shares his journey from conceptualising spaces to building a design studio. He discusses how his unique approach to collaboration, personal space, and the creative process helps him stay grounded in an often hectic industry. Join us as we explore his insights on finding balance, fostering creativity, and embracing each project’s possibilities.
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DENNIS VANDERBROECK
Spatial Designer
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On Crafting Spaces, Collaboration, and Personal Balance
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Dennis Vanderbroeck is a spatial designer known for his visually striking and hyper-aesthetic work that spans theatre, fine art, fashion, and music. With collaborations across iconic brands like DIESEL and Palais de Tokyo, Dennis focuses on creating spaces that evoke dialogue and engage visitors deeply.
EP TITLE
In this episode, Dennis shares his journey from conceptualising spaces to building a design studio. He discusses how his unique approach to collaboration, personal space, and the creative process helps him stay grounded in an often hectic industry. Join us as we explore his insights on finding balance, fostering creativity, and embracing each project’s possibilities.
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WHY I ASKED THIS GUEST
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Today I'm joined by Peter Adolf, a visionary garden designer whose work has transformed how we experience landscapes known for projects like a eyeliner in New York and Ry Garden in Chicago. Peter spent decades redefining the relationship between plant spaces and emotion.
In this episode, we dive into his early challenges and creative breakthroughs. He shares how taking risks shape his craftsmanship career, and what the vital role is of intuition in great design.
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LISTEN TO THE FULL INTERVIEW
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EPISODE TRANSCRIPT
RECOMMENDED CLIPS
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DO OR DIE / A OR B
Are you more rational or emotional?
Piet: Both.
Practical or romantic?
Both.
Structure or color, both controlled the narrative or let the garden tell its own story?
A little bit of both.
Cherish the process or cherish the result.
Result and process.
Your work primarily recognized for its ecological impact or its aesthetic beauty.
Both.
Design one final, groundbreaking garden or curate and refine all your previous works?
I would like to have a new project and I think the gardeners that don't work well or refine my own gardens will take a lifetime again to get them where they were. 'cause gardeners have their own life, and also they need to have their own life to change the right way for the legacy.
The gardens will be taken care of, the gardeners. And is there a wish from you that it's maintained the same way or just let it go?
Let it grow into the future. I would say so. Let it grow by the good hands of bareness and into something that still is good and especially beautiful because you can imagine and trees grow up with the plants underneath, don't like it that or and years. So you have to change your plans. And if I look back to all the plants of what I've done and no garden looks the same anymore, and you can just rip it out and put it all over from your original design. So that's it.
Focus on mentoring young designers or document your life's work?
Both.
Your gardens and your true maintenance or wild and natural growth?
Wild and natural growth doesn't exist because then our garden ends up in metals and BLEs. So, it's always gardens, our gardens and garden. I'll say it's a place where you feel good in and it's extruded from nature, a place for yourself. So you have to treat it, you know, like, you treat yourself and in the best way. So environmentally, right, ecologically, right. And that just wildlife allowed, I see that in that sense. So it's not, Corning is about control. You cannot let it go.
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Thanks for considering.
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SEASON
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EPISODE
31
