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Architonic ID: 20339337
Concetto
Elegante oggetto d’arredo per interni privati e sale da pranzo o mobile di servizio nell’hotellerie di lusso: il carrello bar S 179, che rivisita il progetto del leggendario architetto Ludwig Mies van der Rohe degli anni ’30, è un mobile versatile in tubolare d’acciaio cromato, la cui forma deriva direttamente dalla sua funzione. Un unico tubo d’acciaio piegato e collocato in posizione centrale serve da struttura portante di questo modello lineare. Il carrello poggia su tre punti: le due ruote e il gomito anteriore del telaio. I dischi delle ruote in alluminio sono ricoperti da un anello di gomma e collegati con il telaio tramite un tubo assiale. Questo carrello dal design senza tempo può essere spostato sollevandolo dal manico ricoperto in cuoio nero con il logo Thonet. Sui due ripiani in vetro grigio trasparente possono essere riposti bicchieri, bottiglie e accessori bar oppure libri, vasi e altri oggetti decorativi. I ripiani di vetro sono sorretti da un telaio in acciaio piatto cromato. La barra di contenimento è stata aggiunta da Thonet Design sopra il ripiano inferiore per conferire maggiore stabilità alle bottiglie ed evitare che cadano. Rispetto al progetto originario di Mies van der Rohe, questa riedizione è leggermente più grande per rispondere alle odierne esigenze. Thonet X Tanqueray: per questa edizione Sebastian Herkner reinterpreta il progetto di Ludwig Mies van der Rohe degli anni '30 e lo combina con i colori e i materiali della famosa bottiglia Tanqueray. Il classico telaio cromato dell'originale affascina in questa edizione con il vetro rigato in verde Londra, le superfici a specchio e dettagli come l'iconico sigillo del marchio Tanqueray sulla maniglia in pelle di alta qualità.
Questo prodotto appartiene alla collezione:
Vetro, Metallo, Inox

Germany
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe was and continues to be one of the most influential architects and designers of the 20th century. With his minimalist formal language and use of industrial materials, he changed the face of modern architecture and furniture design. Ludwig Mies van der Rohe: a biography Ludwig Mies van der Rohe was born into a stonemason's family in Aachen, Germany, in 1887. He initially trained as a bricklayer, but as a talented draughtsman he soon moved on to design furniture, working together with architect Bruno Paul. He received his first commission to design a house for the philosopher Alois Riehl in 1907. From 1908, the young Ludwig Mies van der Rohe worked for the architect Peter Behrens, in the same studio where Walter Gropius and Le Corbusier were also working. During this time, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe worked on the design of the German Embassy in Saint Petersburg. In 1928, Mies van der Rohe designed one his most radical buildings, the Barcelona Pavilion, in the Bauhaus style. The Barcelona Chair, which he designed for the pavilion, became a classic of modern European furniture. In 1930, he became the director of the Bauhaus design school, and eight years later he emigrated from Germany to the United States. Both his architecture and furniture design are characterised by their use of new industrial technologies, their minimalist design language and their luxurious materials and finishes. In 1959, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe received the Gold Medal from the Royal Institute of British Architects, and a year later he received the highest honour given by the American Institute of Architects, the AIA Gold Medal. He died in 1969 in Chicago. Brno Chair: the early modernist seat Ludwig Mies van der Rohe designed the Brno Chair together with designer Lilly Reich in the years 1929 and 1930 for the dining room at the Tugendhat House in Brno, Czech Republic. The modernist cantilever chair – now considered a modern classic – emerged from earlier designs he worked on together with Lily Reich, but also from the work of his colleagues at the Bauhaus, such as Marcel Breuer and Mart Stam. The Barcelona Chair In 1929, Mies van der Rohe completed the German Pavilion at the foot of the Montjuïc hill in Barcelona for the International Exposition. He incorporated his minimalist ideals, love for high-end materials, and preference for flowing spaces into the project. He also designed the Barcelona Chair, now an icon of functionalist and timeless design, specifically for the building, but it is now used throughout the world in many different settings. Seagram Building In 1948, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and Philip Johnson completed the Seagram Building in New York City. The building inspired architects for decades to come and is regarded as a landmark of the International Style. Non-structural steel beams were used to highlight the skeleton structure and the modular nature of the building. The bronze coloured Seagram Building housed, among other things, the Four Seasons restaurant, which was also designed by Mies van der Rohe. The interior of the building combined large amounts of bronze, travertine and marble, making the Seagram the most expensive skyscraper of its time. © by Architonic