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A pandemic project by Jaime Hayon and Benchmark Furniture mixes work and leisure

JAIME HAYON’S EXPANDABLE DINING TABLE IS THE PRIME PANDEMIC DESIGN

- WORDS _Drew Zeiba PHOTOS _David Cleveland

In the age of

COVID-19, manufactur­ing has to be done differentl­y. To that end, the American Hardwood Export Council inaugurate­d Connected, a project inviting nine designers to develop timber products fit for life in lockdown. Among the cohort was Valencia-based creative Jaime Hayon, whose contributi­on — a multi-functional table called Mesamachin­e that comes equipped with coordinate­d seating — is the ideal pandemic object: an extendable furnishing with drawers, hooks and shelves designed to provide a single space for working, relaxing, exploring, eating and spending time with family.

According to Sean Sutcliffe — a co-founder of Britain’s Benchmark Furniture, which worked remotely with the designers on the production of their respective creations — Hayon’s curvaceous “Swiss Army knife” of a table displays significan­t technical prowess. Made of solid American cherry (what the designer describes as “a material that’s alive, a material that changes, a material that challenges you”), Mesamachin­e is constructe­d like a hollow torsion box, with a spine and tensioning ribs along it. Comprising elements handturned on a lathe or Cnc-machined and then finished by hand, the “skeleton” is on view from underneath to show off the “true complexity of the build.” As Sutcliffe deservedly brags, “the piece represente­d a tour-deforce of cabinetmak­ing.”

A key to success for this long-distance collaborat­ion? Trust. “Normally, the designer would visit our workshops, feel how the timber profiles, joints or angles work together and then tweak and adjust details accordingl­y,” says Sutcliffe. “As we’ve gone from design and developmen­t to production and remained in close contact via video calls, they’ve learned to put their faith in our craftspeop­le.”

Another hurdle was texture and colour — aspects lost in digital exchanges. But, for Hayon, one of the most significan­t adjustment­s was less about realizing a physical object than working in a shelter-in-place lifestyle. “The biggest change of all,” he said in one of his video dispatches, “is to sit down peacefully with the ideas.” benchmarkf­urniture.com, hayonstudi­o.com

 ??  ?? Composed of solid American cherry, Mesamachin­e by Jaime Hayon takes its cues from a Swiss Army knife. Its elements and components were handmade in the U.K. workshops of Benchmark Furniture (above).
Composed of solid American cherry, Mesamachin­e by Jaime Hayon takes its cues from a Swiss Army knife. Its elements and components were handmade in the U.K. workshops of Benchmark Furniture (above).
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