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Architonic ID: 1074493
Year of Launch: 2009
Seat height: 380 mm
Overall height: 1045 mm
Total width: 700 mm
Total depth: 900 mm
Seat depth: 530 mm
Concept
Oppo is a swivel easy-chair that inhabits a room even when no one is there. The soft shape invites you to communicate without words. Oppo comes in a small and a large version, with or without armrests. Oppo thrives almost everywhere; airports, waiting areas, hotels, lounges, libraries and many other locations. Use our design-tool to configurate your own Oppo!
After years of experimenting with the thin seat shells in laminated Formfelt, in 2009 Stefan Borselius gave shape to a new piece of furniture that seems totally skinless. An “alien” called Oppo. Oppo is slang and means friend or “buddy”.
Comes in two sizes; small and large
Available with armrests
Swivel base with auto-return
Material:
Inner frame in steel and wood. Moulded polyurethane foam upholstered in fabric or leather. Footplate in lacquered steel.
Which came first: the chicken or the egg? Before Oppo there was Puppa… Or was it the other way round? You can use Puppa as a footstool together with Oppo, or as a freestanding seat in its own right.
May be used as a footstool or floor cushion
Material:
Moulded polyurethane. Plywood. Plastic feet.
Measurements (mm):
Seat height 330
Overall height 330
Overall width 730
Overall depth 500
This product belongs to collection:
Closed base, Swivel base
Seat and backrest upholstered, With armrests
Contract, Residential

Sweden
born 1974 in Malmö. Educated at the Konstfack University College of Arts, Crafts and Design. He attended Carl Malmstens school and Steneby school, and studied furniture carpentry and design. Stefan Borselius is an ingenious designer with a head bursting with ideas. He can be quiet and thoughtful, but when he speaks out he’s quite the verbal gymnast, an art he balances with being an equally inventive and an aesthetically pleasing designer. Stefan’s choice of career was inspired by his grandfather and great grandfather who were both skilled furniture carpenters. Stefan prefers to call himself a carpenter, and he believes that hands, thoughts and precision are all important tools of his occupation. Right from the function and material of an object through to the final product, Stefan wants to create furniture for our time and our way of living, our here and our now. When he works with a product, Stefan Borselius leaves nothing to chance, but goes methodically and whole- heartedly through every single detail, every function and every characteristic which a material or a technique can offer. He pushes the boundaries of what is possible to produce, and would rather give up and pursue another route than not produce anything at all. He leaves no stone unturned in his quest for a solution. As a result, his products have a strong sense of identity which already answer unasked questions in their strong expressionism.