‘Tables are the closest thing to architecture’: Robin Rizzini x Pedrali
At this past Salone, Architonic caught up with designer Robin Rizzini to explore his newest piece for Pedrali – Rizz, a sturdy yet light-looking table featuring four aluminum legs that rest elegantly in all kinds of spaces…
mayo 15, 2024 | 10:00 pm CUT
Every now and then something happens that makes me feel old. I don’t mean I’ve-never-heard-of-Taylor-Swift old. I mean the kind of old where you feel you’re no longer down with the kids. (And yes. I realise that’s an expression that an old person would use.)
Take the word ‘rizz’. Those cunning linguists at the Oxford English Dictionary found its nowness so persuasive, they named it word of the year for 2023. I’ll be honest with you. The first time I heard it was last week when I met up with Genoan-born industrial designer Robin Rizzini at the Salone del Mobile Milano.
Meaning charisma or attractiveness, it’s a word that, according to American media outlet NPR, one shouldn’t feel too bad about being unfamiliar with. ‘If you're asking what "rizz" means, you're not alone – particularly if you're a generation or so older than Gen Z,’ they write. ‘But don't feel too left out: there's even a chance that you have rizz without actually knowing what rizz is.’

‘Rizz’ just so happens to be the name of Rizzini’s new table for Pedrali, which has the stuff in spades – and knows it. Yes, it’s a whimsical reference to the designer’s surname, but it’s also a highly apt description of this latest addition to the Italian brand’s robust portfolio of products, hitting as it does the sweet-spot between expression and restraint. I’m not one for superlatives, but it’s a design classic in the making.
‘I always wanted to create the longest, the thinnest table in the world,’ says Rizzini, ‘but it was just a phase. That type of thinking isn’t possible now… It’s not very good for the environment.’
Read on for our Milan conversation, where we discuss typology, longevity and the beauty of the underbelly.
…..
If you design a table today, it should to be something that you can separate into every single material and then reuse or recycle. This is why I tend to work with aluminium. It can be upcycled, recycled, transformed into other shapes. And with particular kinds of aluminiums there’s absolutely nothing lost in the recycling process.
© Architonic
Head to the Architonic Magazine for more insights on the latest products, trends and practices in architecture and design.
Galería de proyectos



















