Size Doesn’t Matter: contemporary Nordic architects who cross boundaries
Head north and you'll find a thriving design culture where the level of consideration given to the way things look, feel and work isn't determined by their scale. Be they housing projects, chairs or taps, the Scandinavian approach to design continues to be a more democratic one, driven in no small part by the number of Nordic architects who design beyond buildings.
February 11, 2013 | 11:00 pm CUT

Leading Danish architect Bjarke Ingels, as part of design studio KiBiSi, gives the everyday domestic tool that is the humble salad server a highly rational, yet aesthetically compelling, treatment

Typology- and topography-changing architecture from Bjarke Ingel's office BIG: The Mountain apartment block in Copenhagen; photo Carsten Kring

Designed as seating for visitors to BIG's Danish Pavilion at Expo 2010 in Shanghai, the 'Expo Chair', designed by KiBiSi and produced by HAY, is fast becoming a contemporary classic

Danish architectural practice BIG has delivered a number of residential schemes that are ambitious in scale. Shown here, their 8 House in Copenhagen; photo Jens Lindhe

The grid-like, space-shaping 'Slice' bookshelf by KiBiSi for Danish brand &Tradition

Swedish architectural office Claesson Koivisto Rune's Villa Widlund foregrounds its constructedness by leaving the joins between its constituting concrete elements exposed; photo Åke E.son Lindman

Meanwhile, exposed stitching on Claesson Koivisto Rune's 'Quartier' ottomans for Tacchini also works to remind us of their construction



Claesson Koivisto Rune bring their architectural thinking to bear on the product landscape: 'Hillside' sideboard for Arflex (top), 'Parcel' storage system for Former (middle), and 'Etage' coffee table for Offecct (bottom)



Stockholm-based TAF Architects pare things down with their duo of utilitarian lamps for Muuto, 'Up' (top) and 'Wood Lamp' (middle), and with their 'Buoy' pendant light for Zero (bottom)

Danish architectural office Schmidt Hammer Lassen's 'The Crystal' office block for client Nykredit marries large scale with visual levity


Schmidt Hammer Lassen Design reduces, reduces, reduces with their 'Sticks' outdoor light for Focus Lighting (top) and their 'Master' workstations for SA Möbler (bottom)

Pure geometry provided by Schmidt Hammer Lassen Design in the form of their 'BLACKBOX' side table for JENSENplus

A collaboration between Schmidt Hammer Lassen Design and manufacturer One Collection: the 'Kuber' space-dividing and -defining interior-design system


Aarhus Arkitekterne have worked with Danish bathroom-fittings brand Vola on a holistic design approach, designing both the Vola Academy in Horsens (photo: Thomas Holm Frandsen, aarhus arkitekterne) and a number of products (shown here, their 'FS1' mixer)


Helsinki-based Vesa Honkonen Architects shape the way outdoor public space is encountered at Nacka Strand, just outside Stockholm (top; photo Jussi Tiainen), while light is also cast indoors through their 'Plate' pendant light for Louis Poulsen (bottom)


Copenhagen office Space occupy themselves with fashioning things big and small: here their 'Lunar' sofa for Stellar Works (top) and their 'Shade' light for mater (bottom)

Swedish architectural office Sandellsandberg's primewinebar in Stockholm. 'We proposed making it a public space, a bar that would be open to everyone,' explain the architects; photo Camilla Stogardt, Åke E:son Lindman



Thomas Sandell of Sandellsandberg designs across disciplines with his 'King' chair for Offect (top), his 'Lapp' carpet for Asplund (middle), and his 'February' table for Nikari (bottom)

Scale is no determinant of creative consideration: Thomas Sandell's 'Lighthouse' indoor/outdoor lamp for Swedish lighting brand Zero
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