Same but Different: classic design and the design of change
Everything changes, so they say. But should it? What about decades-old, often iconic designs? Should they be preserved, as it were, their contemporary production remaining ‘true’ in every respect to the ‘original’? Or ought manufacturers be free to modify them – materially, technically, even formally – in the name of contemporary market appeal. And what about the thorny issue of authorship? Architonic investigates.
December 11, 2012 | 11:00 pm CUT

‘A kit of parts’ is how Vitsoe managing director Mark Adams describes Dieter Rams’s 620 chair programme. From 2013, the London-based manufacturer is the sole licence-holder for the legendary ex-Braun design director’s complete furniture portfolio

Molteni&C got to grips recently with the thorny issue of the licenced reproduction of classic designs and just how far one can modify them when it set about putting a number of previously limited-edition Gio Ponti designs into production

‘I’m sure if Eames were alive today, he would have modified the chair,’ says S+ (formerly SDR+) chief designer Thomas Merkel of the American's 1956 ‘Lounge Chair’, which manufacturer Vitra now also offers in more generous proportions


‘Without doubt an outstanding product’ is how S+’s (formerly SDR+) Thomas Merkel describes Dieter Rams’s iconic 606 shelving system. Both SDR+ and Vitsoe worked with Rams over 15 years on a number of ‘adjustments’ and ‘improvements’

Designed by Dieter Rams and first launched in 1962, the 620 chair programme has undergone an internal re-engineering, which Vitsoe MD Mark Adams describes as ‘a massive undertaking’


The future is bright for S+. With the departure of the licences to Dieter Rams’s furniture, the company has developed an entirely new shelving and sideboard system with technically innovative suspension brackets that allow great flexibility

S+’s M05 side table programme, designed by Thomas Merkel, is, as you would expect from the German system-furniture manufacturer, thoroughly systematic. Four different table heights, as well as four different table tops, are available
Project Gallery

















