Share



Help me find it
Share
This product is discontinued and no longer available. For maintenance information or further details, please
Architonic ID: 1464881
Year of Launch: 2017
A family of seatings of great impact and comfort.
Designed for the home, the office and the community areas. Available with shells in two versions with a wide range of bases and finishes.
Version with mass-pigmented shell (gloss outside)
The shell, made of polycarbonate through injection moulding, is mass-pigmented in the matt colours white, lead grey and mud, and has a standard double finish: gloss outside, and microgoffered inside
Version with matt painted shell
The injection moulded polycarbonate shell features a paint finish in the matt colours white, lead grey and mud.
Considering the nature of the shell, we recommend against outdoor use.
Upholstery (countershell)
Flow Chair and Flow Chair Color seatings can be completed with upholstery: a thermoformed padded countershell with a small pad made of quilted polyurethane and polyester wadding.
The padded versions can be upholstered in fabric or leather. Removable upholstery; extra cover available on requested. With customer’s own leather, the leather piece must be with no defects, such as scars or holes.
Upholstered PAD, optional accessory
Available for both Flow Chair and Flow Chair Color, made with polyurethane and polyester wadding, and with quilting that is thermally bonded to the fabric. This special manufacturing technique endows the texture patterns and the padding with a three-dimensional look, while ensuring quality and durability over time. Because of these special features, the upholstery covering cannot be removed.
Flow Chair Color bases
(for black, white and colored shells)
The bases are supplied in the same colour of the shell. Base with central leg, produced in aluminium painted with epoxy powder in the matt colours white, graphite grey, lead grey and mud or in gloss white. 360° swivel.
VN 4-legged oak base, frame from transparent-lacquered natural oak solid wood with a natural, brown or bleached finish, with a lacquered aluminium coupling device painted matt white, graphite grey, lead grey and mud. 360° swivel.
4-legged oak base, frame from transparent-lacquered natural oak solid wood with a natural, brown or bleached finish, with a lacquered aluminium coupling device painted matt white, graphite grey, lead grey and mud. 360° swivel.
4-legged cross base, die-cast aluminium frame and solid wood legs, lacquered in the matt colours white, graphite grey, lead grey and mud.
4-legged cross oak base, die-cast aluminium frame painted with epoxy powders in the matt colours white, graphite grey, lead grey and mud, and solid natural oak legs with transparent lacquer, available in the finishes natural, brown or bleached.
This product belongs to collection:
Aluminium, Base metal, Metal, Plastic, Seat plastic

France
Since the beginning of his career (a 1990 graduate of Paris’ ENSCI-Les Ateliers, Paris Design Institute), Jean-Marie Massaud has been working on an extensive range of works, stretching from architecture to objects, from one-off project to serial ones, from macro environment down to micro contexts. Major brands such as Axor, Cassina, Christofle, Poliform, Toyota have solicited his ability to mix comfort and elegance, zeitgeist and heritage, generosity and distinction. Beyond these elegant designs, his quest for lightness – in matters of essence – synthesize three broader stakes: individual and collective fulfillment, economic and industrial efficiency, and environmental concerns. “I’m trying to find an honest, generous path with the idea that, somewhere between the hard economic data, there are users. People.” His creations, whether speculative or pragmatic, explore this imperative paradigm: reconciling pleasure with responsibility, the individual with the collective. When asked to imagine a new stadium for the city of Guadalajara, Mexico, he comes back with a never seen before cloud and volcano-shaped building, integrated in a vast urban-development program that re-unite leisure and culture, nature and urbanization, sport aficionados and local citizens. Instead of implanting a stadium, he proposed an environment. And the initial vision has proven a realistic approach: the project has come to life in July 2011. More recently, his concept car developed in partnership with Toyota, has the same objective. MEWE is a synthesis of economical and ecological concepts, integrating issues specific to each stakeholder: the user, industry, and the environment. A pioneering multiple-use platform that is a car for the people, with a body in expanded polypropylene foam: a major innovation. “When I’m working on a project, there’s always an attempt to renew the subject I’m involved in”. Another distinctive aspect of his approach.