


Architonic ID: 20037300
SKU: 197121
Year of Launch: 2017
RESULT CHAIR
The Result Chair features a thin steel-sheet base with an oak seat and backrest, retaining maximum flexibility, lightness and strength. Originally created by Friso Kramer and Wim Rietveld while working at Ahrend in the 1950s, the cutout steel collection has been relaunched by HAY together with Ahrend. Available in a variety of wood finishes and base colours, with a wide range of textiles and leather options for the seat. Result’s strength and versatility makes it suitable for use in many public and private contexts.
DIMENSIONS
W45,5 x D48,5 x H81, seat height 46 cm/ W17.91” x D19.09” x H31.89”, seat height 18.11”
Concept
Created to be adaptable, light and strong, the Result Chair and Pyramid Tables are the last word in cutout sheet steel construction. Originally created by Friso Kramer and Wim Rietveld while working at Ahrend in the 1950s, the collection has been relaunched by HAY together with Ahrend. When initially launched in the ‘50s, it was regarded as a triumph in its innovative use of sheet steel, giving new direction for use in organically shaped products. Today, both as individual pieces and as a collection, it is notable for its sparing use of materials, simplistic construction and for being light enough to move around. These lasting designs manifest functional excellence and aesthetical lightness that have been proved in real environments over several generations.
This product belongs to collection:
Base metal, Metal, Seat engineered wood, Wood
You can visit the product page for these variants—just click on them!

Netherlands
Friso Kramer, born in Amsterdam in 1922. After graduating from the Rietveld Academy of Applied Arts, Amsterdam, he worked as a designer for Cirkel, a steel furniture manufacturer, from 1948 to 1963. In 1963 he became a co-founder of the acclaimed Total Design Group. Later on he was a guest lecturer at the Royal Academy of Art in Den Haag. From 1971 to 1983 he was Art Director and a Member of the Board of the Ahrend Group and member of the jury for many international design competitions. In addition to the famous 120 bench system that is still in use in many underground stations today, he designed a chair in glass fibre-reinforced polyester with a solid wood frame and an upholstered glass fibre-reinforced chair for Wilkhahn in 1967.