The Washington Collection by David Adjaye for Knoll

dezeen_The Washington Collection by David Adjaye for Knoll_6

Product news: architect David Adjaye has unveiled his first furniture collection, designed for American retailer Knoll, which includes two cantilevered side chairs and a limited edition coffee table.

dezeen_The Washington Collection by David Adjaye for Knoll_2

David Adjaye developed the Washington Collection alongside his design for the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington DC, which is currently under construction.

dezeen_The Washington Collection by David Adjaye for Knoll_4

“This project has been an exhilarating and collaborative experience – an unexpected balancing act between the design and engineering processes,” said Adjaye. “My original idea of what this furniture should be was continuously refined and transformed throughout.”

The Washington Collection, which also includes a club chair, ottoman and side table, will be launched by Knoll in October.

dezeen_The Washington Collection by David Adjaye for Knoll_1

The Washington Corona coffee table is made from four cast bronze panels referencing the bronze lattice that wraps around the museum in Washington and will be available in a limited edition of 75 pieces, marking Knoll’s 75th anniversary.

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The Washington Skeleton and Washington Skin chairs balance on a cantilevered stand and are suitable for outdoor use.

The lattice design of the Skeleton chair is constructed from die-cast aluminium, while the Skin version is made from injection-moulded nylon.

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David Adjaye won the design competition for the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture museum back in 2009 and construction began in February 2012.

Adjaye recently designed an observatory and education centre with spiralling stone walls to be built on an island in the English Channel, and a silk-weaving facility in India.

At Design Indaba earlier this year, David Adjaye told us about his relationship with Africa and why he believes the continent provides a great opportunity for architects. See more stories about David Adjaye.

Architect Rem Koolhaas also launched a furniture collection with Knoll at the Milan Furniture Fair this year, which journalist Justin McGuirk told Dezeen was the most interesting thing he saw during the event. See more stories about Knoll furniture.

Here are some more details from Knoll:


The Washington Collection for Knoll, David Adjaye’s first collection of furniture, transforms his architectural and sculptural vision into accessible objects for the home and office. The collection consists of two cantilevered side chairs, a club chair, an ottoman, a side table and a monumental coffee table.

David Adjaye said, “Knoll approaches furniture as making connections between people and how they work and live their daily lives. This project has been an exhilarating and collaborative experience – an unexpected balancing act between the design and engineering processes. My original idea of what this furniture should be was continuously refined and transformed throughout.”

Commenting on Adjaye’s work, Knoll design director Benjamin Pardo said, “David is doing really innovative and important architectural projects, and what really interested us was to see that work on an entirely new scale.”

Adjaye’s limited edition cast bronze coffee table reflects this cross-over. The sculptural table with a clear glass top is constructed from four cast bronze panels, and four connecting plates. The roughhewn exterior contrasts the highly reflective, hand polished interior surface. To mark our 75th anniversary the bronze coffee table is limited to an edition of 75.

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A whole new meaning to multifunctional.

We’ve featured hundreds of clocks, lights, coat hangers, iPhone docks, alarms and speakers… but we’ve never seen one concept that is ALL of the above! Called Hook7, it’s seven every day tools in one puzzling object. Check it out!

Designer: Dongsung Jung


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Shop CKIE – We are more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the CKIE store by Yanko Design!
(A whole new meaning to multifunctional. was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Cool Hunting Video: David Adjaye for Knoll: The renowned furniture brand recruits a brilliant young architect to create a fantastically structural chair

Cool Hunting Video: David Adjaye for Knoll


Recently, CH spoke to architect and designer David Adjaye, a rising star whose award-winning firm is working on the National Museum of African American History and Culture for the Smithsonian in Washington, DC. A thoughtful…

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King and Queen Chair by Jeong Yong

Industrial design student Jeong Yong has created a pair of chairs with grid-like frames based on traditional Korean furniture.

King and Queen Chair by Jeong Yong
King Chair

“I was inspired by the patterns which are normally used for Korean traditional house and furniture,” Jeong Yong told Dezeen.

King and Queen Chair by Jeong Yong
Queen Chair

“I believe that Korean traditional houses and furniture are practical, and the balance between straight lines and curves of the pattern makes it more beautiful.”

King and Queen Chair by Jeong Yong
King Chair

One chair is lower and wider than the other, and Jeong Yong has personified the set by naming it King and Queen Chair.

King and Queen Chair by Jeong Yong
King Chair

“The King is not too fancy but has strong facial impression. However, the Queen is more fancy and at the same time she lowers her position to warm a embrace,” the designer said.

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King Chair

The chair is made from sepetir wood and will come in black or white.

King and Queen Chair by Jeong Yong
Queen Chair

Jeong Yong is due to graduate next year from Konkuk University Glocal Campus in Seoul.

King and Queen Chair by Jeong Yong
Queen Chair

Other chairs we’ve published recently include one with a backrest and seat wrapped in thick lengths of cord and another with bird-shaped armrests.

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Queen Chair

See all our stories about chairs »

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“Some companies hire designers for marketing reasons” – Konstantin Grcic

Movie: in our second video interview with Konstantin Grcic in Milan, the industrial designer discusses the upsides and downsides of designing collections for multiple brands, rather than building relationships with a select few. 

"Some furniture companies hire designers for marketing reasons" - Konstantin Grcic
Konstantin Grcic

“I think the business model of design studios working for several companies, and companies working with many different designers, is quite unique [compared to other industries],” says Grcic, who unveiled new products for brands including Emeco, Flos, Magis and Mattiazzi in Milan this year.

"Some furniture companies hire designers for marketing reasons" - Konstantin Grcic
Medici collection by Konstantin Grcic for Mattiazzi

“It has its advantages; it creates dynamism,which I think is positive. I’ve seen the negative side of it as well; because of the dynamics things change and a company that was great to work with for five years suddenly becomes less interesting.”

"Some furniture companies hire designers for marketing reasons" - Konstantin Grcic
Medici collection by Konstantin Grcic for Mattiazzi

Grcic concedes that he would prefer to work with fewer companies and build long-term relationships with them.

“To be honest, I prefer working for only a very few companies and having a very steady relationship,” he says. “That’s how it was in the old days, especially in Italy. The great masters each had a few companies that they worked for, almost for a lifetime, and that’s what produced the really great work.”

"Some furniture companies hire designers for marketing reasons" - Konstantin Grcic
Traffic collection by Konstantin Grcic for Magis

However, Grcic says that is still possible to work with a company on a short-term basis and produce good work.

“I think some companies, for sure, hire designers for marketing reasons, for having their names in the catalogue,” he says. “But there are other companies – and those are the interesting companies – that are looking for designers as partners for realising certain projects.”

"Some furniture companies hire designers for marketing reasons" - Konstantin Grcic
Traffic collection by Konstantin Grcic for Magis

He continues: “It’s interesting that a company like Magis, for example, somehow succeeds in bringing together very different designers on very different projects. If it works, it’s actually quite fascinating. It creates an interesting tension and energy.”

"Some furniture companies hire designers for marketing reasons" - Konstantin Grcic
Parrish chair by Konstantin Grcic for Emeco

Similarly, Grcic says that a long-standing relationship with a company doesn’t guarantee good design.

“There are companies that only work with very few designers and it can show that the continuity creates better work,” he says. “But it can also end in repetition and a kind of dead-end street.”

See all our stories about Konstantin Grcic »
See all our Milan 2013 coverage »
Watch our Dezeen and MINI World Tour video reports from Milan »

"Some furniture companies hire designers for marketing reasons" - Konstantin Grcic
OK lamp by Konstantin Grcic for Flos

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Kirk chair by Patrick Frey for Vial

Product news: Hannover designer Patrick Frey curved and folded a sheet of thin aluminium to create the seat of these chairs for outdoor accessories brand Vial.

Kirk chair by Patrick Frey for Vial

To create the Kirk chair, Patrick Frey precisely cut a special aluminium alloy so it bent into the desired shape.

Kirk chair by Patrick Frey for Vial

He used clamps to sculpt the seat shell over a frame formed by the tubular aluminium legs and back, then folded the edges to increase stability.

Kirk chair by Patrick Frey for Vial

The seat curves up at both sides to meet the lower bar of each armrest and swoops right to the top of the back, leaving large gaps in the corners.

Kirk chair by Patrick Frey for Vial

Designed for Vial to be used both outdoors and in, the chairs are stackable for easy storage and transportation.

Kirk chair by Patrick Frey for Vial

Matte surfaces are powder coated in black, white, red, blue and green.

Kirk chair by Patrick Frey for Vial

Frey has also designed a collection of stools and benches each made of a single piece of folded plastic and a range of wall-mounted boxes where extended joints form hooks.

Kirk chair by Patrick Frey for Vial

We’ve also featured a chair with a backrest and seat wrapped in thick lengths of cord, plus another with a seat and back moulded from lightweight 3D plywood.

Kirk chair by Patrick Frey for Vial

See more chair design »
See more design by Patrick Frey »

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Antler Illusion

Antlers are an iconic symbol that’ve been around since the age of the caveman & they aren’t going out of style anytime soon! Whether it’s a cardboard mount for the house or a wearable Alexander McQueen headpiece, we love a clever twist on the familiar fragment. Just like the Antler chair! From a side view, the outline of a stag’s rack is clearly visible, but from any other angle it looks like your average chair. From the woodsy cabin to the modern loft, its subtle aesthetic compliments a variety of interior styles.

Designer: Dongsung Jung


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Shop CKIE – We are more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the CKIE store by Yanko Design!
(Antler Illusion was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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“I felt we should change the way Emeco makes chairs” – Konstantin Grcic

Movie: Designer Konstantin Grcic tells Dezeen that American furniture company Emeco had to industrialise its production methods to produce his new Parrish chair in this video interview filmed in Milan. 

"I felt we should change the way Emeco make chairs" - Konstantin Grcic
Konstantin Grcic

Grcic originally designed the Parrish chair as part of a range of furniture for Herzog & de Meuron’s barn-like Parrish Art Museum on Long Island, completed in 2012.

The chair was launched by American furniture company Emeco as a commercial product at Milan earlier this year.

"I felt we should change the way Emeco make chairs" - Konstantin Grcic
Parrish chairs and tables at the Parrish Art Museum

In the movie, Grcic explains that he approached Emeco to produce the chair because of its experience of working in aluminium, most famously with the iconic Navy Chair, which Emeco has produced since 1944.

"I felt we should change the way Emeco make chairs" - Konstantin Grcic
Emeco’s Navy Chair

“I felt we needed a company to support the development of the project,” says Grcic.

“Emeco stands for chairs in aluminium and aluminium was the perfect material for the chair that we had in mind because the [Parrish Art Museum] is very open [to the elements].”

"I felt we should change the way Emeco make chairs" - Konstantin Grcic
Parrish chairs at the Parrish Art Museum

Unlike the Navy Chair, in which each piece is welded together by hand, the legs, armrests and backrest of the Parrish chair are all locked together by a single joint under the seat.

"I felt we should change the way Emeco make chairs" - Konstantin Grcic

“Everything is mechanically joined to a central core, a piece of die-cast aluminium, which is really the heart of the chair,” Grcic explains.

“So we have one moulded piece that solves all of the structure of the chair and the seat is exchangeable. You can have an upholstered seat, a plastic seat or a wooden seat.”

"I felt we should change the way Emeco make chairs" - Konstantin Grcic

Grcic says that he deliberately wanted to move Emeco away from the time-intensive production methods involved in producing the Navy Chair.

“I felt we should actually change the way [Emeco] makes chairs,” he says. “Industrialise it, simplify it, eliminate all the dirty work, all the hand labour. That’s what really informed the concept of the chair.”

"I felt we should change the way Emeco make chairs" - Konstantin Grcic

He concludes: “Emeco will always produce the Navy Chair in the way they produce it, but I think now we’ve established another form of production inside their company.”

See all our stories about Konstantin Grcic »
See all our stories about Emeco »

See all our Milan 2013 coverage »
Watch our Dezeen and MINI World Tour video reports from Milan »

"I felt we should change the way Emeco make chairs" - Konstantin Grcic

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Partridge Tables by DesignByThem

Product news: Australian designers Nicholas Karlovasitis and Sarah Gibson have added dining and coffee tables to their range of timber stools with metal collars at the tops of their legs.

Partridge tables by DesignByThem

The duo own Sydney design company DesignByThem and created the different sized Partridge tables and stools from solid white ash timber coated with a natural wax finish.

They can be self assembled with aluminium brackets that sit neatly against the legs and underside of the seat or table top.

Partridge tables by DesignByThem

“Our aim with the Partridge tables is to create simple balanced forms that will endure physically and aesthetically,” said Karlovasitis. “We feel that using a warm and tactile material is comforting and allows us to achieve this.”

Partridge tables by DesignByThem

The Partridge Collection will be featured at Tent London next month as part of the London Design Festival.

Other furniture by DesignByThem on Dezeen includes bright recycled-plastic chairs.

See more tables »
See more furniture »

Photographs are by Pete Daly.

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by DesignByThem
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SINsa Stool/Table

‘SINsa Chair series’ Stool,Table,Dining. Design of the ‘sin-sa’chair is motivative UK gentleman. Be according to refined image..