
Hublot's Big Bang Watch at 20
Released in 2005, the original Big Bang design was big and brash. It had an oversize 44-millimeter case; a chronograph, or stopwatch, function; and a bezel held in place with six exposed screws. Also prominent was its experimental material mix of steel or red gold, titanium, ceramic, carbon fiber, Kevlar and rubber. That year, it won the design prize at the Grand Prix d'Horlogerie de Genève, the watch industry's annual awards event.
It also set Hublot, founded in 1980 and generally considered an insider sort of brand up to that point, on the way to becoming something of a household name.
'The Big Bang was a miracle,' said Jean-Claude Biver, the industry veteran who was the company's chief executive at the time. 'When we started in 2004, nobody knew Hublot. Ten, 15 years later, everybody knew the name. It made Hublot.'
The watch's name helped. 'I came up with the name because I was convinced this type of watch, with its materials, dimensions, colors and modular construction would create a revolution in the watchmaking tradition,' said Mr. Biver, 75.
The Big Bang was expensive, too. 'The first steel and rubber models were 8,900 Swiss francs,' he said. 'It was not cheap at all. It was courageous to come out at that price.'
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Boston Globe
6 hours ago
- Boston Globe
Dance poles and leopard-print walls: Love motels ready rooms for climate summit
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Advertisement Seeking to calm jitters, Brazil said this month it had struck a deal with two cruise ships to provide some 6,000 additional beds, which will first be offered to developing and island nations at discounted rates of up to $220 per night. New hotels are also being built and old ones refurbished. Schools are being fitted with beds. Sporting clubs are being transformed into dormitories and residents are rushing to revamp homes into rentals. Still, with less than four months to go, much of the new lodging is still not complete and the city is thousands of beds short of its target. Against this backdrop, Belém's numerous love motels -- short-term accommodations that charge by the hour and often lack a reception area or amenities like gyms and pools -- are preparing to fill the gap, already tweaking and outfitting many of their 2,500 rooms for visitors attending the climate summit. 'It's the time to join forces,' said André Godinho, who represents Belém in the planning of COP30. 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9 hours ago
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