ARC12 Stoelontwerp
Transcription
ARC12 Stoelontwerp
1 ARC12 Stoelontwerp ‘Integration’ 2 The concept behind ‘Integration’ Integration of a product in personal life In 1885 my Great-Grandparents bought the ‘Kinder-Speisesessel no. 3’ (child’s high table chair no. 3) for their son, my Grand-father, as it is depicted in the famous Thonet Catalogue from that same year. After my Grandfather his two younger brothers and one sister grew up in it. A generation later my grandfather’s three sons grew up in it and since I was born in the Dutch Indies the chair skipped one generation and had to wait for better times in my Grandfather’s attic. My two daughters grew up in it and some decades later this beautiful chair, still in mint condition is used to host little cousins and toddlers from friends who come for dinner. This chair with its delicate patina of time has many stories to tell and it is always with some emotion when it can be used again and it is always done with reference to its history. When not in use it has its own prominent position in the living room only to be beautiful and always the oldest family member alive. Will ‘Integration’ likewise become a cherished family member for its users? 3 Integration in the Thonet history of industrial innovation ‘Integration’ pays tribute to one the most interesting and far-reaching industrial innovations of the 19th Century in the development and production of consumer goods especially furniture. Studying the Thonet history of industrial innovation has been and always will be a must for any contemporary designer and product developer. Thonet industrialised the age-old handcraft technique of bending wood with water over open fire by introducing steam and bending moulds in a fabrication process of serial production. With this technology it became possible to produce identical parts with a high enough precision to develop furniture in a modular system. It became possible to choose from a series of different interchangeable parts in different design styles to assemble a chair, stool, bench and many other furniture pieces as the 1885 catalogue shows. In the 1920ties Thonet followed the same strategy in the development of bent steel tube furniture as catalogues from that era clearly show. The just invented seamless steel tube made bending with high precision possible on an industrial scale, which again made use of interchangeable parts possible. Nickel and chromium electro plating became the apt finishing for this modernistic style. Thonet has followed this line of innovations ever since with the early introduction of plastics and other new materials and nowadays the EXP collection is a brooding place of new materials and innovative manufacturing technologies as well as new design styles. Integration in the history of design Looking at the design history of Thonet is at the same time looking at the history of design in general. In the early days the bent wood technology was the given tool for visualising the florid design style of those days. The modernist architects and designers of the 1920ties and later found in the Thonet steel tube technology the visual expression they were after to realise their dreams for a new transparent and clean image with an industrial expression. Especially Dutch designers have always shown great interest in the possibilities of production technology to create new visual expressions. Integration in social history From the early days onward Thonet furniture entered all social layers of the private, public and office environment. It made new concepts possible for the interiors not only of private houses. It’s influence in civic public life for the masses like the public café for man and women alike, the Vienna dance halls with the Straus waltzes and the many new designed restaurants as well as in office interiors has been substantial as many examples show. The design concept of ‘Integration’ It can be manufactured in different materials like carbon, aluminium, and steel, birch plywood, bio-based polymers, solid wood, Corian and other plastics with enough integral strength. It can be produced with different manufacturing technologies like CNC milling, water jet cutting, laser cutting, carbon pre-preg moulding, thermoplastic and thermoset moulding and 3D-printing. Depending the choice of the user it is factory assembled from various parts in various combinations. To save transportation costs ‘Integration’ can be disassembled in the sides and separately the seat and backrest. With the entry are some parts in different materials to give an idea about possible options. The 1:1 model The model of the entry ‘Integration’ is made from Corian and carbon sheet. Seat and backrest are (hand) moulded, while the negative moulds have been made with CNC-milling. All the other parts are made with water jet cutting. With the model are some examples of parts in other materials as well as some samples in carbon and corian. Drawings in this presentation are developed in Rhinoceros 3D drawing software. The different flat parts are transformed into closed surface lines and send in DXF Format to the water jet cutting machine. The 3D drawings of the seat and backrest are transformed into a mesh drawing of the mould and directly send to the CNC milling machine. The moulds are milled in Polyurethane. ONE DOES NOT SIT ON A MODEL ALTHOUGH THE CONSTRUCTION IS STURDY ENOUGH. IT IS THE SEAT THAT SHOULD HAVE BEEN MADE SOMEWHAT THICKER. (4mm.) ‘Integration’ is a system with many options to assemble a variety of furniture pieces with the chair as central piece. Only a few of the other options are shown here. The chair 4 5 ‘Integration’ as dinner table or office chair can come with and without armrests. When there are no armrests the empty position in the construction is filled with a small part. A sample of that part in carbon comes with this model. There is no stackable version yet developed for ‘Integration’. By repositioning the back-legs to the sides this option can be realised. 6 7 ‘Integration’ in a theatre setting. 8 ‘Integration’ as a low easy chair with or without armrests. 9 ‘Integration’ as a high stool with or without armrests 10 ‘Integration’ as a bar stool by introducing a lower backrest with carbon tubes 11 ‘Integration’ as a high children’s chair. 3D drawing software has a simple command option to scale a design. This is done linear. The high stool has been scaled with 83% and ‘Integration’ was transformed into a children’s high stool. 12