When architects extend their design activities beyond the creation of buildings themselves to consumer goods such as furniture, light fittings or living accessories in general, there are normally two reasons for this: on the one hand the design principles of an architectural concept are, in the tradition of the work of art as an integral design, transferred to objects from the interior of the building such as furniture, in order to create an overall harmonic unit (Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Gerrit T. Rietveld, Norman Foster). The second source of motivation is the experimentation with new production techniques and materials, in which the limits of what is possible are explored on smaller objects. An example of this is the tubular steel furniture of the Bauhaus period by Mart Stam, Marcel Breuer and Mies van der Rohe, or the experiments with shaped wood by Alvar Aalto.
Quaderna | 710
Nomad Steel
Jingzi-30
Dining Table 947
Gran 174
Kubrick
Extension Table H92/H94
Bill 5–050
Pebbles
Red and Blue | 635
Gordon Sofa 3660
Novecento petit fauteuil
Standard Chair
Guéridon
Armchair 401
Foster 500 armchair
S 64 PV
Kunstschau
NORMAL
GHOST
Filiberto
Ospite
Bed Couch
Solo S140LS
Ombra
Glasstable Y805A
Magister
Manhattan Linen
ESU Bookcase
Spatio Office System
Fledermaus
Wire Chair DKR
Chair 69
Villa Gallia Sofa
Goteburg 1 | 501
Table X800D
Gran Turismo easy chair
Sideboard/Desk 2115
Cambridge
Iuta
S 34
Eames Plastic Armchair DAW
Oxford
Arc dining table
Harry Large
Table Lamp B2575 blue
Cabinet 2215
Table 80A/B/C
Fledermaus
Armchair 41 Paimio
Arne
Pendant Lamp A338
EA 108
Table 95
CHTH
AJ Aarhus
LC11-P




