Designing both the Pila chair and the Pilo tables was driven by the idea of creating light objects.
The plywood seat and back parts of the Pila chair are supported by four very thin sticks in plain wood which are maintained together by a structure in injected aluminium that is almost invisible yet highly solid. Pilo answers the same quest for lightness and additionally proposes an open system that allows to compose a table that goes with one’s needs and wishes.
Pilo is a table reduced to its minimum: solid wood feet that support a wooden top thanks to discreet and strong aluminium connections.
Pilo and Pila comes in natural and stained ash.
Specifications
Stacking chair. Seat and back in ash plywood natural or painted. Legs in solid ash, natural or painted and joining element in sanded or painted die-cast aluminium.
Size Description
Seating height 45 cm (17.7″) Height 76 cm (29.9″) Wide 55.5 cm (21.9″) Deep 46 cm (18.1″)
Ronan Bouroullec
(born 1971) and Erwan Bouroullec (born 1976) have been working together for some
ten years. Their collaboration is a permanent dialogue nourished by their
differing personalities and shared perfectionism.<br />
In 1997 they presented their “Disintegrated Kitchen” at the Salon du Meuble in
Paris and were spotted by Giulio Cappellini, who gave them their first
industrial design projects, notably the Lit clos (Closed Bed) and Spring Chair.
In 2000, Issey Miyake asked them to design a space for his new collection of
A-Poc clothes in Paris. Then came the decisive meeting with Rolf Fehlbaum,
chairman of Vitra, which resulted in their conception of a new kind of office
system, Joyn, in 2002. This was the beginning of a special partnership which has
borne fruit in numerous projects, including Algues, the Alcove Sofa, the
Worknest and the Slow Chair. Since 2004, the Bouroullecs have also been working
with Magis, for whom they have designed two complete furniture collections,
Striped and Steelwood. Finally, they have worked on several types of textile
wall systems, such as the North Tiles, in close collaboration with the Kvadrat
brand, for whom they designed a new Stockholm showroom in 2006.