Designlines

End Note

- By GREGORY FURGALA

How a collaborat­ion with a local bicycle maker illustrate­s Fig40’s three-pillared approach to design

A conversati­on with Klaus Nienkämper Sr. helped Lee Fletcher, an industrial designer and co-founder of Fig40, to clarify his approach to design. The long-time furniture manufactur­er told Fletcher that he didn’t like the Aeron chair, a lauded classic. Its hard edges knocked against tables – occasional­ly those from Nienkämper’s own collection – causing dents and damage.

Fletcher’s takeaway from this conversati­on with the manufactur­ing great: design needs to be neighbourl­y; things must interact well with other things. Add to that approachab­ility and elementali­ty (or “engagingne­ss” and material compositio­n) and you’ve got Fig40’s philosophy – three pillars, like a simple stool. Terence Woodside, Fletcher’s partner in Fig40, agrees, but articulate­s it with an engineer’s brevity: “Everything can be better.”

“Everything,” in this case, is not just the end product, but the process as well. Fig40’s recent collaborat­ion with Mariposa, a local maker of bespoke bicycles, is a case in point. Bike sales slow during the winter, leaving unused steel tubing and lugs – the steel joints that connect that tubing into a frame – to pile up. A casual conversati­on between Mariposa and Fig40 evolved into a working concept: furniture built with the tooling, parts and techniques used in bicycle manufactur­ing.

The end result is a three-legged counter stool that encapsulat­es Fig40’s three-pronged design philosophy. Bicycle head tubes were adapted to support a footrest, while a new lug was fabricated to support the wooden seat. The typology’s neighbourl­iness is proven – Nienkämper’s tables are safe – and it’s an efficient compositio­n of available materials. Plus, thanks to Mariposa’s trademark colourways, it’s gorgeous. Three pillars in tandem support the whole. Or, put simply, Fig40 just made a better stool. FIG40.COM

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