For me, the year started with a host of meetings, visits to design fairs and time spent on the road. Here are a few things that I picked up along the way.
Go where the talent is
“For a long time, we thought that all of the best wooden pieces came from Scandinavia,” South African designer Yaniv Chen told me in Paris. “Then I started to explore local talent and the craft of South Africa’s Cape Malay people. I found out that they have a huge talent for woodworking that has been passed on from generation to generation.” Chen and his collaborators have since focused some of their production efforts on these skills. The approach has not only challenged the status quo and provided a point of manufacturing difference but it has also supported a smaller economy and maintained making traditions.
Help crafts to evolve
Over (a few too many) drinks, I had a conversation with Luis de Oliveira, co-founder of De La Espada, that continued this thread. The Portuguese-made furniture brand is working hard not only to champion artisanal talent but to preserve it too. It is involved in an initiative in which young makers are partnered with veteran craftspeople to work on a project. The resulting exchange of ideas and skills creates a way for traditional skills to be transmitted – and evolve.
Keep tabs on material innovation
It seemed that every industry event and fair that I went to last year had a stand or display dedicated to highly engineered, environmentally friendly new materials. We’re finally starting to see these on actual products. German kitchen company Gaggenau has employed an ultra-compact stone surface by Spanish firm Cosentino to create a kitchen benchtop that doubles as an induction stove. Sleek.
Construction matters
Sustainability isn’t just about using clean materials and production methods – it’s also about how we can pull an object or building apart at the end of its useful life. I was reminded of this when I clocked Patricia Urquiola’s Dudet chair in Cassina’s Paris showroom. The seat’s metal core and its polyurethane foam padding can easily be pulled apart, allowing it to be recycled (which is only possible when things are separated into their constituent parts).
Reuse what you can
The Mipim Awards shortlist has been announced, featuring many outstanding projects. Our pick of the bunch is Studio Gang’s Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts (see below). In a way, it is a statement on sustainability – rather than raze the site’s existing structures, Jeanne Gang and her team built a bigger one that united them, ensuring their continued use. “It'd be worth the trip to Little Rock to see it,” Gang told me late last year, shortly before it opened. Does anyone have any good travel tips for Arkansas?
Nic Monisse is Monocle’s design editor.