Trends and Design 2010
Transcription
Trends and Design 2010
Der Content-Service der imm cologne zu Design und Wohnkultur The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle 10_en Trends and Design 2010 Content 2 Editorial Design and interior lifestyle 62 Trend Book imm cologne 2010 Post-Big Bang Aesthetics 4 imm cologne 2010 – A Sneak Preview New ideas from all corners of the (furniture) world 67 The Trend Book Press Conference in Stockholm Video Podcast (DVD) 12 D3 Contest - All 29 entries The Next Designer Generation 68 Designer’s Voice: Cecilie Manz “Great news!” 28 D3 Contest - Statements Johanna Grawunder, Konstantin Grcic and Stefan Diez on the D3 Contest 72 Designer’s Voice: Britta Chantal Tibo, RoomDoctor “Wing chairs and wheelbarrows…” 30 D3 Schools imm cologne: A new school of thought 76 Interview Udo Traeger, Koelnmesse “We see ourselves as the most modern furniture store in the world.” 36 Products: Sitting Multifunctionality in Mat Black 40 Number games: Consistently cosy 44 Products: Sleeping Sleep on it! 46 Number games: Sleeping through 48 Products: Carpets Carpets with Character 50 Number games: Tying the knot 52 12 interior lifestyle trends: Living the future today 60 Short cut: Home trends at the beginning of 2010 At home indoors and out 84 Cologne: Update Out and about in Cologne 88 Interview Dick Spierenburg Pure Village: A market square for the fair 92 Trends and Innovations Successful mix at the imm cologne 2010 98 Content Service: Trend Book Interior Trends 2010 Content Service: Business by Design 100 Imprint/Credits 2 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Photo: Koelnmesse; FAR (IMM10_TD0101_01) Published by: Koelnmesse GmbH imm cologne Presse Markus Majerus Messeplatz 1 50679 Cologne, Germany Tel.: + 49 221 821-26 27 Fax: + 49 221 821-34 17 E-Mail [email protected] www.koelnmesse.com Editorial I 3 Editorial Design and interior lifestyle At present we are inclined to question everything which, for decades, we had regarded as a safe bank for our affluent society: first and foremost, of course, the global financial sector, but also the principles of growth and consumption and the ever-faster merry-go-round of innovations. We are looking for a path that leads to sustainability. That goes for our interior culture too. Are trends actually compatible with this day and age at all? There is a lot more to interior culture than living with furniture classics and cultivating a certain style. Interior culture is a reflex response to our personal circumstances. It is about our reactions to the here and now, but also about the ongoing development of our “hardware”, of the products we choose. Every time we decide on a certain product, we are effectively making a statement – in favour of a certain aesthetic language, an attitude to life, a need, a tradition or a sense of responsibility. Trends indicate the direction in which designers, manufacturers and interior designers are driving this development. The continuous creation of new product ideas is an inextricable part of our interior culture that not only reflects change but delights in staging it. At the beginning of every year, the halls of Cologne Exhibition Centre become the venue for a very special experience, providing a stage for the interiors of the future and showcasing the entire spectrum of furniture and interior design innovations. At the bar in Pure Village, the fair’s new presentation format, exhibitors from Germany, Europe and all over the world will be getting together to discuss the latest trends and new products. Our latest Content Folder is dedicated to the trends and innovations that will be on show at the imm cologne 2010. In addition to a preview of the first new products, it presents 12 trends that will influence the way we live tomorrow. They include predictions about future layouts as well as selected product and interior trends, illustrated with a series of specially produced photos. A summary of the Trend Book explains the current Interior Trends “Discipline”, “Comfort Zone”, “Rehab” and “Trickery”. In spite of all the differences between the various styles, one thing seems certain: quality is becoming a key factor in furniture design. By the way: the enclosed DVD also includes a podcast of the Trend Book press conference in Stockholm, as well as a host of explanatory texts and an interview with designer and Trendboard member Cecilie Manz from Copenhagen. This folder also focuses on the imm cologne’s D3 Design talents event, where colleges, students and graduates can present their work and make important business contacts. The D³ Contest, which will again be presenting an array of inspiring prototypes by next-generation designers, has established itself as a particular highlight that draws manufacturers and designers like a magnet. The two insider interviews with imm cologne chief Udo Traeger and exhibition designer Dick Spierenburg provide some interesting insights into the development of the trade fair concepts as well as background information on the imm cologne and its new Pure Village format. To make your stay in Cologne all the more enjoyable, we’ve also compiled a new selection of design-oriented tips about the city for you and your readers. As always, you can use the articles and photo materials free of charge provided they are credited accordingly. We would ask that you notify us of any publication and, if applicable, send us some specimen copies. I hope the material will provide some interesting ideas and look forward to welcoming you to the imm cologne 2010. Best wishes from Cologne, Markus Majerus PS: Because of the amount of information we have compiled for you, we have included a DVD along with the Content Folder. In addition to the texts and photos from this issue, it also contains the two folders published in the run-up to the imm cologne. All texts and photos – including those from earlier content folders – are available from our free online content system at www.imm-content-service.com. 4 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 In January, the imm cologne will be opening the new furniture season again with a comprehensive range of new products from all areas of interior design. Brandname manufacturers and designers from all over the world will be presenting their collections and ideas for furniture, lighting and carpets. Year after year, the Cologne fair manages to show not just a limited selection but the full diversity of the interior design worlds – from basic dining rooms to upmarket bedrooms and innovative designer sofas all the way to extravagant experiments with form. Platforms like Pure Village or D³ give even the most unusual ideas an opportunity to find their audience alongside premium brands and bestsellers. Far from reflecting a sense of crisis, the first of the new products reveal their makers’ sheer delight in innovation: a new look coupled with an undeniable sense of humour reduces furniture like the Lackaffe table by Atelier Haußmann or the Handle stool by TemaHome to its functional skeleton and formal typology without diminishing its attractiveness; interlübke’s innovation, presented in the thoroughly unspectacular-sounding “storage furniture” category, transforms walls into sculptures full of life and rhythm; Calligaris, Bretz and Brühl interpret the desire for more softness in very different ways – sometimes elegant, sometimes extroverted, sometimes simple and expressive, but always original and effortless; carpets like Fabric Squared by kymo and luminaires like Moree’s Eraser 260 are more than just a textile and a lamp: the former is nothing short of living space, the latter a symbol of energy-saving warmth. And despite their homogeneous design, classic room collections like the Vico bedroom range by Gruber+Schlager or the Tao dining room by Haleywood are breaking away from the boredom of stoically recited serial monotony with concepts that are as original as they are convincing. At the same time, unusual concepts like Ottana, the new classic from Leolux, are proving that diversity is no barrier to peaceful coexistence. The design world and the imm cologne have plenty of space for them all. Texts and selection: Frank A. Reinhardt imm cologne 2010 – A Sneak Preview I 5 imm cologne 2010 – A Sneak Preview New ideas from all corners of the (furniture) world Photo: Ligne Roset; Ted (IMM10_TD0401_17) Photo: Leolux; Ottana (IMM10_TD0401_12) Always a perfect fit Turnabout time Peter Maly’s design is proof that even a compact sofa shape can look modern and elegant. The Ted sofa collection is as comfortable as it is functional. And while its simple silhouette might be reminiscent of a classic sofa type, it features a wealth of original details. The armrests and backrest cushion can be removed or exchanged in next to no time, transforming the sofa into a day bed or chaise longue. It can also be connected with a second Ted sofa to create a corner combination. The armrests are movable and can be folded down into a resting position. Ted is a “remix”, a new interpretation of Maly’s Prao sofa from 1985, which ligne roset produced very successfully for many years. Ted has been revised and technically enhanced: the cushions are now more angular thanks to attractive saddle-stitch seams and the new, visible straps are very distinctive. www.ligne-roset.com The form of Ottana, a swivel armchair by designer Frans Schrofer, goes back to the classic Chesterfield chair. Even so, the simple interpretation, comfortable shape and quality technology make Ottana a thoroughly contemporary piece of furniture. The chair and stool are available in several colours and feature elaborate rolled seams that accentuate the contours. The base is rigorously modern and available in polished or lacquered steel. The hardness of the seat cushion can be varied with a lever mechanism that guarantees perfect comfort. A modern armchair that owes its fascination to the classic Chesterfield design. www.leolux.com 6 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Photo: Atelier Haußmann; Lackaffe (IMM10_TD0401_01) Photo: Bretz; Kautsch (IMM10_TD0401_02) Perfectly-formed primate Plush retro design “Lackaffe” is a height-adjustable powder-coated iron trestle that can be used with a wide range of different tops and boards for a multitude of looks and usage options – the possibilities are almost boundless. Whether you’re after a smart or rustic effect, Lackaffe provides the optimal footing for an individual piece of furniture. Brothers Andreas and Rainer Haußmann have helped trestles make a comeback and produce the design the traditional way in small artisanal workshops in Berlin. The idea for the shapely support originates from Hamburg designers Thesenfitz & Wedekind. www.atelierhaussmann.de Bretz has taken Grandma’s floral armchairs and puffed them up to new, voluminous dimensions. But the sofas in the Kautsch series aren’t just full of hot air: thanks to specially hardened inner springs and precisely positioned, high-resilience cold-cure foams, the body sinks gently into the depths of the upholstery. The lines radiating from the centre form upholstered compartments that snuggle round the body. At a purely visual level, Kautsch looks like a clichéd exaggeration straight out of a comic. In reality, however, the upholstery collection is merely adapting to people’s all-too-real need for colour and cosiness in their comfort zone – where, according to the imm cologne’s Trendboard, they are seeking refuge from the crisis and taking it easy on cake-like sofas and pouffes (Trend Book Interior Trends 2010). Kautsch is also a contemporary interpretation of the traditional brand’s cosy couches of yesteryear. www.cultsofa.com www.bretz.de imm cologne 2010 – A Sneak Preview I 7 Photo: Brühl; Powder (IMM10_TD0401_03) Photo: Haleywood; Tao (IMM10_TD0401_08) Avant-garde form with a dash of poetry Modern frame An armchair you can sink into without sprawling. The clean-cut circular armchair and sofas present a femininely flared, A-line silhouette. Sitting on powder evokes a sense of dream-like security that wraps itself around the user like a comforting blanket. The severity of the armchair’s outline is offset by the lightness with which it rolls across the floor on integrated casters. The sofa, however, stays put. The same finesse and pronounced instinct for form are apparent even in the accentuating seam details of the fabric and leather-covered models: geometrically distinct on the cone-shaped incision of the armrests, filigree and linear in the rounded corners of the armchair and sofa. The slightly curved dividing seam of the backrest and seat carcass playfully draws attention to powder’s subtle deviation from the norm. Covers in fine leather and textiles like wool felt and bamboo add a touch of glamour. www.bruehl.com The Tao collection of wood dining room furniture by Haleywood is a prime example of the high design quality of many of the new products in the imm cologne’s Basic segment. Massive and severe in its cubic vocabulary, the design tries to establish a balance between space and volume, conveying an impression of rustic elegance. The play of the empty spaces in the frame opens up a window that can be used for decoration and adds depth and lightness to an otherwise heavy form. www.haleywood.com.sg 8 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Photo: Gruber + Schlager: Vico (IMM10_TD0401_05) Airy dreams Despite the solidness of its construction, the individual elements of Vico look anything but heavy. Instead they seem to avoid ground contact, preferring to hover just above the floor. A hint of Far Eastern aesthetics gives the bedroom collection consisting of bed, bedside table and chests of drawers additional lightness. A solid wood frame with no visible joins, clear lines and striking geometry holds the mattress, a soft, couch-like cushion invites you to relax. And there’s no need to put Vico up against the wall: it looks just as good as a stand-alone in the middle of the room. The matching bedside table is round, demonstratively flaunting its autonomy from the visual vocabulary of the bed. The upper section swivels open to reveal lacquered storage space. The bedside table is covered with high-grade cowhide that matches the colour of the leather cushion on the bed. The dressing table is a real gem: once the lid has been opened, the flap can be pushed in to permit a comfortable sitting position as you apply your (IMM10_TD0401_06) (IMM10_TD0401_07) make-up in front of the illuminated mirror. Handy drawers provide neat storage for make-up utensils. www.gruber-schlager.com imm cologne 2010 – A Sneak Preview I 9 Photo: interlübke; Reef (IMM10_TD0401_10) Eye-catcher interlübke’s reef cabinet, designed by Eva Paster and Michael Geldmache, will be making its debut at the imm cologne 2010. A relief of nested doors picks up on architectural trends with different depths to create a new interpretation of storage space. reef is a very special piece of furniture that unfolds its effect just as successfully in small rooms as it does in larger spaces. The interior fittings can be adapted to suit individual requirements. A genuine surprise – inside and out. When used to fill the entire width of a room, the cabinet range opens up a wealth of new design possibilities for walls and partitions, transforming their surface from a neutral background into an organic structure – like the reef that gives it its name. www.interluebke.de (IMM10_TD0401_09) 10 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Photo: kymo; Fabric Squard (IMM10_TD0401_11) Photo: Calligaris; Fashion Supersoft (IMM10_TD0401_04) Going to ground Dressing up the sofa Who needs a sofa? Diversity is the central idea and life philosophy behind Fabric Squared, for as the Japanese realised long ago, you don’t actually need much in the way of furniture as long as you’ve got a good carpet. A fabric cover with an embossed dimple structure is pulled over a core of visco-elastic polyurethane foam to create the perfect and exceedingly stylish mat for a host of different activities: your daily yoga or fitness workout or a cosy chill-out with a good book and a cup of tea. The carpet comes with an aha-experience thrown in: thanks to its memory foam, dents caused by pressure – such as footprints – fade away rapidly until the carpet regains its original homogeneous surface tension. www.kymo.de The elegant “Fashion Supersoft” sofa by Calligaris promises a sense of stylish security and gives no immediate hint of its considerable versatility. For despite its classic design, this sofa is anything but timeless. The two-coloured fabric covers can be replaced effortlessly and are available in a wide range of colours and materials: a fabric sofa can be transformed into a leather couch in next to no time. In view of the inviting design, however, its affinity with fashion seems almost secondary. The form manifests Fashion Supersoft’s visual independence and guarantees you’ll be sitting comfortably however the two of you are dressed. www.calligaris.it imm cologne 2010 – A Sneak Preview I 11 Photo: Moree; Eraser 260 (IMM10_TD0401_13) Photo: TemaHome Handle (IMM10_TD0401_16) Block of light Small, practical, colourful! Why make things complicated when they can be so simple? The Eraser luminaire turns dimming the light – a process that normally takes place within the concealed technology of the switch – into an intuitively understandable event. On top of that, the way it resolves the difficulty of dimming an energy-saving lamp is as elegant as it is functional. The Eraser 260 light cube radiates a pleasant light and can be pushed as far out of its shielding aluminium shell as required. The luminaire itself thus becomes one big dimmer and can be adjusted to provide exactly the amount of light desired – from a subtly glowing surface all the way to a bright entity that illuminates the entire room. A genuine design innovation at the imm cologne furniture show and a lamp that will cut a good figure whether it’s used on the floor, sideboard or bedside table. www.moree.de Handle, the multicoloured stool family from TemaHome, consists of exuberant, cartoon-like creations that are captivatingly simple and highly original. Designer Fernando Brizio is famous for his colourful, eccentric style, and the Handle stool certainly does justice to his reputation. The wooden frame is coated with fabric and equipped with a loop that suggests mobility. Brizio deliberately used a pleasant-to-handle fabric for the loop, giving it a sophisticated hand-sewn look. All you need to store the stool when it’s not in use is a hook on the wall. www.temahome.com 12 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 [D3] 2010_Contest I 13 [D3] The Next Designer Generation They are underdogs competing with major league players: the young designers who take part in D³ Design talents, the newcomer platform at the international furniture and interior design fair imm cologne that is now in its seventh year. But sometimes they manage to steal a little of the glory usually reserved for established design brands and their creative professionals. It is usually the first time they have appeared before a major public. In a no-frills setting, they present prototypes for which, more often than not, there is no manufacturer. At least not yet. But who knows? Trade visitors at the imm cologne have long since discovered the D³ Contest and the winners’ exhibition as a treasure trove of talent. Photo: Koelnmesse (IMM10_TD0502_01) 14 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 The talent forum [D³] Design talents shows which way the wind is blowing. At the imm cologne, young designers get the chance to present their original product ideas alongside the established stars of the furniture industry. Design lives from a constant stream of new ideas. And sometimes from the reinvention of old ones. What’s crucial is a constant change of perspectives that questions what has already been achieved, penetrates beyond established aesthetics and ventures to suggest new approaches. Experimental design thus fulfils an important function for the entire discipline – by ensuring continuous input. The works of young designers are like a fountain of youth for the professional league. They take a self-confident approach to new technologies and are more than willing to improvise if it means turning their ideas into prototypes. And yet young designers are increasingly on their own: jobs for graduates are even rarer than commissions. Both, they fear, will be in even shorter supply as a result of the financial crisis. That’s why many designers have come to terms with the idea of turning their product ideas into reality single-handedly, either as spectacular one-offs or in small editions. This has led to the development of an aesthetic language that is less indebted to industrial considerations and even less inclined to compromise. Humorous, unconventional, flamboyant, ambitious, visionary and sometimes just ingeniously simple – that is the face of young design today. Creative fireworks in Cologne That benefits platforms like D³ Design talents and its international newcomer competition, the D³ Contest. The exhibition at the international furniture and interior design fair imm cologne sparkles with creativity and has established itself as a talent forum and creative powerhouse that is highly regarded by the industry and design scene alike. Six years ago, Koelnmesse and the German Design Council were looking for a format that would be just as compatible with the designers’ situation as it was with the public’s interests. They succeeded: the [D3] 2010_Contest I 15 [D3] The Next Designer Generation Photo: Kolenmesse; Martha Schwindling_PÁP (IMM10_TD0501_25A) curated exhibition in Hall 3.1 is meanwhile one of the imm cologne’s most popular attractions. Experimental design rubs shoulders with the market-driven offerings of the furniture industry, rough prototypes are juxtaposed with the perfect sleekness of exclusive brands. A spark of anarchy in a commercial, meticulously organised world. For American architect and art designer Johanna Grawunder, it is this contrast between the commercial and the experimental that makes the imm cologne so attractive. “In the last two years in which I’ve sat on the jury of the D3 Contest, the presentation has been extremely good, really amazing, and shown an incredible amount of talent,” says Johanna Grawunder. “On the one hand you’ve got a professional selection of commercial design, and on the other a strong area of purely experimental design. And the two complement each other wonderfully because there’s nothing standing between them. Both sides can learn a lot from each other. It’s an elegant, intense reduction of what happens in the design world, like the essence of a good sauce.” Only the best get to show what they can do Koelnmesse holds the competition every year in connection with the imm cologne. This year 521 young designers from 43 countries took part, submitting a total of 649 ideas. The best 29 works will be shown at the imm cologne 2010. The curation ensures that the objects shown and the way they are presented meet the contest’s high quality standard. All students and graduates who qualified less than three years ago are eligible to enter their prototypes. The D³ Contest aims to give young designers a forum where they can present their ideas for the furniture, lighting, home textiles and accessories of the future to an international public. What makes this talent show so special is not just its competitive character but the unusual generosity of its organisers. Only those who manage to convince the selection panel are allowed to exhibit their ideas. But once this hurdle has been cleared, Koelnmesse invites the winning designers to take part in the exhibition with 16 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 no ifs and buts. “We support the participants by making sure the presentation of their prototypes doesn’t end up being a financial burden,” explains Rüdiger Sprave, who organises the exhibition for Koelnmesse along with Natalie Köhler from the German Design Council. Those hoping to qualify for the competition can submit their entries free of charge – and Koelnmesse organises and finances transport, travel and accommodation for the lucky few who get to exhibit their designs. The concept has proven its worth – a verdict also shared by Munich designer Stefan Diez: “I really like the Design talents show at the imm cologne. It’s great that the Cologne fair has it curated and doesn’t just set up one design shop after the other as they’re increasingly fond of doing in Milan. It’s so confusing and usually a real disappointment as far as the presentation is concerned – so much so that I didn’t even go and look at it this year.” Colleges as talent generators Even though the presentation of the competition winners is the main highlight, the D³ design event wants to offer more than just a good show – it aims to provide a basis for communication between young, creative people and experienced professionals and to mediate between people, institutions and markets. That’s why D³ Design talents also includes the exhibition formats D³ Professionals and D³ Schools, where universities and colleges present themselves and compete for the best newcomers. The imaginative installations the professors and students come up with often bear little resemblance to conventional information stands; instead they are independent works in their own right, self-composed testimonials of the universities’ and students’ credentials for the creative market. The number of participating colleges has been growing steadily for years. In 2010, 37 institutions are expected to take part – a unique opportunity to see which direction research and theory are going in. “We want to offer an attractive package that not only paints a representative overall picture of the young scene but offers room for experiments and scope for new ideas as well,” says Rüdiger Sprave. This combination seems to coincide with market requirements. Even the sometimes critical imm cologne observer Konstantin Grcic finds this part of the fair particularly appealing: “What I think works very well and has really established itself is the D³ forum for young designers. I think the way it‘s done is better than at the Salone Satellite in Milan, which has got too big and is sadly totally isolated because it’s in a hall of its own, it’s no longer part of the fair proper. Cologne does it better, it’s smaller and I think the curation is stronger too. The format really benefits from that. This hall is very popular with the public too, and the colleges take it seriously as well. It’s important for the students, and the manufacturers visit it too. It’s really caught on.” And the fact that quite a number of the prototypes presented in the D³ Contest have gone on to find a manufacturer shows that the Cologne fair’s ambitious project makes sound sense. For the public and for the designers. Introduction: Frank A. Reinhardt Editing of product texts: Stephan Ott Translation of product texts by kind permission of the German Design Council Klára Šumová_Love: The main idea is to introduce the material wood in different stages of the work progress. The stand is made of a bark covered trunk, which emerges into a clear baroque curve. This raw piece of wood is complemented by a machine-cut stick and a simple lighting construction. The whole concept concludes with adding a huge paper shader with the fine structure of bark. [D3] 2010_Contest I 17 IMM10_TD0501_27 18 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 IMM10_TD0501_01 IMM10_TD0501_02 Martin Born_Crate shelf: Remi Bouhaniche_Etirement: The modules of the Crate shelf can be composed in full freedom of alignment. This three-dimensional predicate uncloses applications inaccessible to the typological wall shelf. Without loss of use value, choreographed “movements” and sophisticated access paths are as easily realised as more ordinary setups. Together with its nuanced palette of colours, the system can be applied as an active design element. http://mborn.com I shaped Etirement on the principle of an organic body composed by skin and skeleton. In pulling a rod, the intensity of the light can be reduced and raised according to the distortion of the fabric membrane. In order to produce a flowing and expressive movement, I concentrated on a very precise and harmonious gesture focused in one point. In this way, the lamp becomes a temporary shape creating a poetic time from daily action. www.usin-e.fr IMM10_TD0501_04 IMM10_TD0501_03 David des Moutis_Collection Ratio, Quart table: Stephanie Estoppey_Siluet: During my visits to a sheet metal workshop for the development of another collection called PLI, I noticed that the offcuts were growing in number. This observation was the starting point as well as the aim of this new collection: to think of a new table collection without producing any offcuts. www.david-des-moutis.com Siluet’s form suggests a sketched outline and plays, in a fanciful way, with the chaos of clothes on the chair. The function of the chair back is taken over by a structure reminiscent of the shape of a clothes hanger. They enable clothes both to be organised and to be thrown informally over them – an alternative solution for storing clothes that have just been worn. www.stephanie-estoppey.ch [D3] 2010_Contest I 19 IMM10_TD0501_05 IMM10_TD0501_06 Adam Farlie_Mourning Light: Robin Grasby_Homework: Mourning Light is an exploration into perceptions of archetypes whose understanding is entirely based on predetermined expectations. One is instantly aware of the void underneath Mourning Light. One can put his hands up into the blackness and realise that the essence of the light – the bulb – is unseen and absent. The light takes on an uncanniness heigthening our sensory perception of its form. www.adamfarlie.com Designed for the home office/studio, Homework is an adaptable system which allows the user to customise every aspect of his workspace. By selecting everything from surface size and materials to storage and accessories the user can create an environment as rich and specifically personalised, or as simple and generic as he requires. www.robingrasby.com IMM10_TD0501_07 IMM10_TD0501_08 Alexander Gufler_Berta: Alexander Gufler_ Axel: In this shell arm chair, the legs are held firm by the curved seat and back and, together with the structural support beneath, form a stable unity. The junction between the two curved surfaces and the legs creates the armrests. The arm chair impresses with its external form that has been kept simple and because it is comfortable to sit in. Attention has also been paid to the ease and cost of production. Berta is made from solid ash and ash-face plywood. www.alexandergufler.com The idea for this chair sprang from a notion of combining traditional furniture construction with CNC router technology. The Axel chair is made in solid maple. The steam bent seat and backrest are shaped using CNC technology and are then put together with the arms and legs to create the finished chair. www.alexandergufler.com 20 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 [D3] 2010_Contest I 21 Pepe Heykoop_Brickseries: The Brickchair is my interpretation of a drawing called “all the chairs I sat on” by James Gulliver Hancock. It is drawn in a rather childish way but with an eye for every detail. As children most of us built their world with LEGO or wooden bricks. An inside construction now allows you to create nearly everything you can think of. The bricks become a material to work with. Imagine … www.pepeheykoop.nl IMM10_TD0501_13 22 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 IMM10_TD0501_09 IMM10_TD0501_10 Robert Haslbeck_Karsten/Rolf: Robert Haslbeck_Under-Koffer: The Karsten Box Collection, a series of stackable boxes in a standard European format is inspired by its plastic cousins. The boxes, traditionally made from recycled wood, tell a story from a previous life with each surface and thus become multi-faceted individual pieces. The Rolf Trolley makes the Karsten Collection mobile. The two together bring the flexible stockroom into the home and the workplace. www.roberthaslbeck.de Godfather and inspiration for Under-Koffer was the wallpapering table. The result is a range of tables with obvious advantages: easy to carry around, quick to set up, providing maximum usable surface area and the possibility of being stored in a minimum of space. www.roberthaslbeck.de IMM10_TD0501_12 IMM10_TD0501_11 Jessica Hansson_Cabinet filled with shadows: Sebastian Herkner_Tauber-Cabinet: A sculptural piece of furniture, which picks up the light from surrounding light sources and gives it a new purpose in the cabinet. The slats inside the cabinet transform the light into a shadow play of graphical patterns on the surfaces around. Near the window houseplants create beautiful figures in the cabinet. Fill it with books, magazines, collections or just leave it empty and let it become the jewellery of the room. www.jessicahansson.se The inspiration for Tauber-Cabinet, a symbiosis of bench and sideboard, is to be found in ventilation shafts and industrial claddings made of folded sheet metal. The diagonal folds both ensure stability and create a multifaceted surface at the same time. The reflections in the warm brass surface bring together the piece of furniture and the room in which it is placed, thus contrasting with the essentially closed, industrial metal structure. www.sebastianherkner.com [D3] 2010_Contest I 23 IMM10_TD0501_14 IMM10_TD0501_15 Studio Joon & Jung_Rocking on the Beach: kieser + spath_Warp: For the first time in the history of the earth, the urban population is larger than the rural population. But living in a city might cause a nostalgic feeling for nature. On the one hand, the plastic pipe shape creates a natural seashore sound. And on the other hand, the shape of the chair entirely made out of pipes is reminiscent of an electronic circuit or urban city landscape. Both, sounds and figures might fulfill your nostalgia for nature and urban life. www.joonjung.com The WARP table turns lingering at the table into a special experience. Everything that is on and around the table is reflected in a domed mirror, which is mounted beneath the glass tabletop. The interplay between material objects, light and shade opens up new perspectives and changes the way people act at table. The theme of distorted perception is thrown into particular relief by contrast with the simplicity of the table’s design. www.kieserspath.de IMM10_TD0501_16 IMM10_TD0501_20 Chae Young Kim_Knitted Room: Sanna Lindström/Sigrid Strömgren_Gand Central: Lines, generated as fine as possible by 2D vector graphics, were re-interpreted as threads to be braided and knitted onto hard surfaces. They give a warm and cosy feeling of knitted and felted fabrics; printed in grey scale the light and shadow effect adds a 3D illusion. Furthermore, an opaque heat-sensitive ink will increase the phantasmal vision revealing partly and randomly, as it gets warm from sun or indoor light. www.chaeyoungkim.com During a trip we got lost on our way to the Central Station. At a newsstand we found a pop-up map which helped us to find our way. After years the map was rediscovered and helped us once again to find orientation, now through its ingenious construction. GRAND CENTRAL is an expandable table that transforms in a spectacular and beautiful way – from a space saving occasional table to the central piece of every room. 24 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 IMM10_TD0501_17 IMM10_TD0501_18 Johanna Körberg_Flamenco: Lifegoods_AT-AT Walker: Flamenco is my inspiration. Flamenco as a dance; the movement and the powerful expression, how one person can express so much feeling and bring atmosphere to a room. I wanted to catch this movement – to capture this very moment of a strong emotion. We are fascinated by wood and its codes. We pick up antique details of cabinetwork and give the object a look which is totally contemporary due to its dimensions. We explore the limits of the wooden piece by expanding its legs and by creating a drawer that functions as a light dimmer. The lamp is like a science fiction object but characterised by the warmth and the preciousness of woodwork. www.lifegoods.ch [D3] 2010_Contest I 25 IMM10_TD0501_19 IMM10_TD0501_29 Yi Hsuan Lin_Step Chair: Emma Fox Derwin / Nigel Groom_xy+z suit rack: By a simple action of flip over, a new function of the chair is introduced. Not only does this chair serve as a sitting furniture, it also serves as a ladder for high level access. When the chair is flipping over, it approaches the laddershape and has the ability to remain stable. www.yiiydesign.com The contemporary man’s xy+z suit rack is elegant, funny and modern, inspired by the traditional men’s valet clothing stand. Our suit rack accommodates your entire ensemble: jacket, shirt, tie, belt, pants and shoes. A single line, hand formed in three axes from steel, powder coated with a light texture to prevent clothes from slipping off, the piece folds up for easy assembly, disassembly and transport. www.well-groomed-fox.com 26 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 (IMM10_TD0501_21 IMM10_TD0501_22 Markus Maurer_Riga: Julien Renault_Hand forged aluminium series: This piece of work began with the question: How can balance be shown and experienced in an object? The result is the RIGA lamp. A free-moving LED pendant lamp based on the principle of a mobile. Particularly striking is the way in which it is suspended with only one wire. The lamp moves under the influence of the conditions and external circumstances of the place where it hangs. It is a lamp that invites one to reflect, relax and dream. www.markus-maurer.com My aim was to source inspiration from the archetypal processes and techniques of forging steel and apply them to aluminium. The family combines standard aluminium extrusions with elements made by using forging skills and details. In order to obtain a rather rough texture usually found in steel, the aluminium parts have been sand gritted and finally anodised. These objects are a dialogue between industry standards and near-craft techniques. IMM10_TD0501_23 IMM10_TD0501_24 Johanna Richter_Schaukelkette: Kilian Schindler_allotment stories/wardrobe: An accessory for the home that is also a fashion item. Schaukelkette is reductionist and subdued, but not too subdued: an item of jewellery for the home. The inspiration for this design came from the antiphonies between an object in the home and a piece of jewellery. A swingcum-necklace, – a new way of looking at what furniture is all about. www.johannarichter.de The shape of the wardrobe is reminiscent of climbing supports in the garden. But in the case of allotment stories/wardrobe, it is items of clothing and accessories that “overrun” the powdercoated steel framework. Boxes in a variety of materials can be added to complement the wardrobe. There, even the smallest pieces of equipment can find a home. www.kilianschindler.com [D3] 2010_Contest I 27 IMM10_TD0501_25 IMM10_TD0501_26 Martha Schwindling_PÁP: Elisa Strozyk_ Wooden carpet: PÁP is a chair with a shape derived from a folded sheet of paper. A key element of the entire design process was not to lose sight of this feature. Though the seat is therefore very thin and seems very delicate, it is held firm thanks to the folding and is surprisingly strong. The upper part above the enclosed seat is a free-swinging framework in tubular steel, which serves as an additional graphic element in the design. www.marthaschwindling.de Wood is one of the most original materials. Here the familiar material appears in a surprisingly flexible form, its rigidity becomes soft and flowing. The wooden carpet can lie flat on the floor, but it can also be playfully positioned in the room, and thus becomes an object in its own right, independent of its original function. www.elisastrozyk.de IMM10_TD0501_28 Marc-Samuel Ulm_TriLas: TriLas is to be seen as a contemporary interpretation of ergonomics and design in the everyday world of the workplace. The stool supports and challenges people working in a seated position and turns their occupation into an active and deliberate act. Its statically technical appearance contrasts with the playfully active feeling one gets when sitting on the stool, an effect achieved by mounting the seat on an elastomer ball. www.marc-ulm.de „ 28 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Konstantin Grcic Photo: Koelnmesse; Andreas Körner (IMM10_TD0502_01) “What I think works very well and has really established itself is the D3 forum for young designers. I think the way it‘s done is better than the Salone Satellite in Milan, which has got too big and is sadly totally isolated because it’s in a hall of its own, it’s no longer part of the fair proper. Cologne does it better, it’s smaller and I think the curation is stronger too. The format really benefits from that. This hall is very popular with the public too, and the colleges take it seriously as well. It’s important for the students, and the manufacturers visit it too. It’s really caught on.” www.konstantin-grcic.com [D3] 2010_Statements I 29 [D3] Statements “D3 is an elegant, intense reduction of what happens in the design world, like the essence of a good sauce.” Johanna Grawunder Photo: Koelnmesse; Lutz Sternstein (IMM10_TD0502_02) “For me, its main appeal lies in the juxtaposition of the commercial and the experimental, and especially the talent forum D3 Design Talents. In the last two years in which I’ve sat on the jury of the D3 Contest, the presentation has been extremely good, really amazing, and shown an incredible amount of talent. In my opinion, it’s this quality and the generosity with which the imm cologne invites the approx. 30 selected contestants, helps them with their prototypes and presents them at the show that makes Cologne unique. In this respect, it’s as if the imm cologne is acting as a non-profit organisation, giving the upcoming designers and students a forum for presenting themselves on an important international stage without having to compete with thousands of elitist events by star designers. So on the one hand you’ve got a professional selection of commercial design, and on the other a strong area of purely experimental design. And the two complement each other wonderfully because there’s nothing standing between them. Both sides can learn a lot from each other. It’s an elegant, intense reduction of what happens in the design world, like the essence of a good sauce.” www.grawunder.com Stefan Diez Photo: Koelnmesse; Andreas Körner (IMM10_TD0502_03) “I really like the design talents show at the imm cologne. It’s great that the Cologne fair has it curated and doesn’t just set up one design shop after the other as they’re increasingly fond of doing in Milan. It’s so confusing and usually a real disappointment as far as the presentation is concerned – so much so that I didn’t even go and look at it this year. I assume a lot of people have to get into horrible debt to pay for being there, and then they want attention at any price.” www.stefandiez.com 30 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 [D3] 2010_Schools I 31 [D3] imm cologne: A new school of thought Photo: Hochschule für Gestaltung Offenbach; imm cologne 2009 (IMM10_TD1201_01) This year the newcomer platform D3 Design talents at the international furnishing fair imm cologne is showcasing the creative potential of 36 colleges from the areas product design, interior architecture and architecture. They are presenting themselves to a designsavvy audience with some fascinating design and room concepts – a magnet and contact forum for design’s future elite. The college landscape for designers is a fascinating field. These days nobody studies at a certain college just because it happens to be in their home town any more – instead students choose from an international array of very different types of school with different philosophies and reputations. At the same time, a university’s good name does not only depend on its professors, but on the performance of its students as well. Talent powerhouses like the Royal College of Art in London benefit from the success of Jasper Morrison’s pupil Konstantin Grcic just as much as the Hochschule für Gestaltung in Karlsruhe benefits from the reputation of Grcic-pupil Stefan Diez or the renown of Werner Aisslinger, both of whom are currently teaching at the college and supervising student projects. It’s the kind of scene where people know each other. The colleges’ relationship network and the way budding designers present themselves and their work during their training can be just as crucial for a young designer’s success as his contacts with the industry. His time at college is not just used to build various more or less spectacular prototypes, but to work on his own career as well. But it is the school that largely determines his sphere of action. Even if only for that reason, the choice of which college to attend is crucial. The way an institution presents itself, the way it lets its students show themselves to the public, the platforms it offers them – these factors can make a college just as attractive to young creatives as its list of professors and graduates. And so the colleges too have long ceased portraying themselves as ivory towers. Instead they present themselves as cosmopolitan creative workshops that broaden the 32 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 horizon and give their fledglings a good start in life. And what platform could be more appropriate than the international furnishing fair imm cologne which, with its D3 Design talents format, has successfully established a sophisticated programme for promoting newcomers. Besides the D³ Contest, which provides a stage for young designers and recent graduates and not infrequently leads to future participation in the D3 Professionals show for independent designers and design studios, the imm cologne has also created a well-attended forum for colleges: D³ Schools. All three D³ Design talents formats are clustered in Hall 3.1 and have become a popular sourcing destination for the industry. Which is why it is usually considered good form not only to focus on the institution itself but to present its young, ambitious apprentices to international trade visitors and the general public as well. D3 Schools provides a professional framework for presenting course content from the fields of architecture, interior architecture and product design, as well as outstanding student projects. The academies are given an opportunity to inform visitors about the orientation of their research and teaching, and students are given a chance to make contact with decision-makers from industry, artisan enterprises, commerce and associations. Even the inexperienced youngster can prove he has serious potential as an idea-giver for interiors and furnishings. In 2010, colleges and universities from all over the world will be represented at the imm cologne. First-time exhibitors from Columbia, New Zealand, Russia or Japan will be giving the forum a particularly international flair this year. And the chance to see how they approach the field of design isn’t only of interest to young people looking for the right alma mater, it provides some fascinating insights for anybody else who visits the exhibition too. The schools themselves are responsible for the design of their fair stands and exhibition space – and the professors and students seize this opportunity to demonstrate their creativity with both hands. The sometimes extremely unusual installations have nothing in common with conventional information stands. They are often an aesthetic highlight in their own right, presenting a sophisticated interior design concept or telling their own design story. The colleges have to pull out all the stops to create a presentation befitting of their reputation. At the fair, they vie with one another to exhibit the best design and room concepts and have the chance to show what they can do in competitive conditions. During the imm cologne, an independent jury will present awards to the best presentations in the D3 Schools show. There will be prizes for the categories Best Product Design, Best Architectural Concept and Best Communication Concept. The D³ Schools show is always good for a surprise. At the imm cologne 2009, for instance, the HFBK Hamburg put its visitors in a darkened black box and swung them (we can only hope they had a good head for heights) across the putative boundaries of a room, marked out by strips of light, in order to communicate the idea of a comprehensive design concept that encompasses more than a single space. The HfG Offenbach transported its entire workshop to the fair stand and christened it “72 Square Metres” so as to give visitors an idea of the working methods and atmosphere at the college. 30 works by students were displayed to exemplify the design process and demonstrate the kind of approach the Offenbach college considers particularly important. The jury awarded this installation the prize for Best Communication Concept on the grounds that “The presentation communicates the entire process of joyful creativity". When it comes to establishing platforms for their students, the colleges’ inventiveness extends far beyond the Cologne fair. The city’s “own” college, for instance, the KISD (Köln International School of Design), recently opened its own, centrally located shop where its students and those of its partner colleges can sell their products and services. The product assortment ranges from clothing, furniture, graphic arts, audio, video, accessories and information all the way to food: a unique collection of prototypes, oneoffs and limited editions for anyone interested in design or just looking for an original gift. [D3] 2010_Schools I 33 Photo: HFBK Hamburg; imm cologne 2009 (IMM10_TD1202_02) 34 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Photo: HFG Offenbach; imm cologne 2009 (IMM10_TD1201_04) Photo: HFG Karlsruhe; imm cologne 2009 (IMM10_TD1203_04) [D3] 2010_Schools I 35 The Hochschule für Gestaltung (HfG) in Karlsruhe has set up a similar, more virtual interface with consumers. It recently launched its own label, the “kkaarrlls” collection, consisting of around 20 items in limited editions, all of them developed by students and alumni during their studies. One of them is Kilian Schindler, who was solely responsible for the college’s stand at the imm cologne 2009. Schindler wrote his dissertation about the aesthetics of German allotment gardens, concentrating on certain aspects and putting individual elements in a new context. The familiar monoblock plastic chair, for instance, was reduced to its contours but reinvented as a lavish piece of wrought ironwork. The omnipresent eyesore in white plastic is thus transformed into a scarcely perceptible chair that recedes discreetly into the background as nothing more but a frame for holding cushions. It’s hardly surprising that the HfG and Kilian Schindler are succeeding with their strategy. Not for nothing did the jury at the imm cologne 2009 award the prize for the Best Architectural Concept to the Karlsruhe college. It is an incentive for other schools to launch their own initiatives – and position themselves at D³ Schools as committed teachers and successful mediators between the creative sphere and big business. Word has spread that the imm cologne is an ideal launch pad, as the record attendance of 36 colleges and universities goes to show. Further information: http://www.hfbk-hamburg.de http://www.hfg-offenbach.de http://www.hfg-karlsruhe.de http://www.kisdshop.de www.imm-cologne.de Photo: Köln International School of Design; Shop (IMM10_TD1204_01) 36 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Even if low, super-deep couches have been dominating the aesthetics of the sofa landscape for years, sitting is becoming an increasingly individual affair and seating furniture increasingly multifunctional. Folding backrests, adaptable pelvic supports and adjustable seat heights: the sofas and chairs of the future will adapt to our bodies, not the other way round. Shaped according to the latest ergonomic findings, they stabilise the spine and give it the necessary support. Who wants to end up with backache every time he watches an epic-length film from his favourite spot in the livingroom-come-home-cinema? And if the seating looks great as well, all the better. The trend is very definitely towards mat black. Text and selection: Lars Mörs Products: Sitting I 37 Products: Sitting Multifunctionality in Mat Black Bending the rules The design of the two oak-veneered plywood chairs by the name of CH04 Houdini is the work of Munich-based Stefan Diez. They were commissioned by e15, a design label known for its passion for wood. The result: two contemporary yet classic-looking wooden chairs, one with and one without armrests, both of them with a novel silhouette. The backrests and seat frame curve around the base to form a harmonious-looking seat shell. Inspired by a technique used for building model aircraft, thin, two-dimensional plywood boards are bent by hand around a complexly milled solid wood ring. The balanced proportions and harmonious tension between form and material combine to create two thoroughly modern yet timeless wooden chairs. Design: Stefan Diez www.e15.com Photo: e15; CH04 Houdini (IMM10_TD1303_01) 38 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Photo: add interior; Lean (IMM10_TD1303_02) Photo: Rolf Benz; AMO (IMM10_TD1303_03) Sit back and relax! One thing at a time Despite its thoroughly straightforward design, the Lean lounge chair seems to issue an invitation: why not lean back and relax! It owes its charisma not only to the softly rounded edges but to the combination of exclusive materials and traditional craftsmanship as well – the work of Danish manufacturer add interior. The upholstered shell rests on a solid oak base. The composition of exquisite materials is rounded off by a smart leather cushion with decorative diamond quilting. The elegant yet modest chair was designed by Danish-Italian duo Gamfratesi. Design: Gamfratesi www.addinterior.dk The modularly designed AMO collection from Rolf Benz owes its sensuous charisma to the voluminous, soft and comfortable seat and back cushions that look certain to deliver on their promise of a comfortable sitting experience. A new kind of pocket-spring core featuring two different types of vertically offset springs is designed to provide individual seat adjustment and pleasantly soft support. The elaborately crafted back and intricate seam details round off the sensual, luxurious effect of the thick leather. www.rolf-benz.com Products: Sitting I 39 Photo: Sajica; Agura (IMM10_TD1303_07) Photo: Hødnebø; Spinnaker (IMM10_TD1303_08) Naturally warm and cold 90° westwards You can tell where the Agura sofa by Japanese manufacturer Sajica comes from just by looking at it – its form and exotic choice of materials give the game away. Admittedly, the sofa doesn’t necessarily seem suitable for people who like to sprawl out. But for its fans, the unusual properties of the Japanese material Agura is made of more than make up for that: igusa, a kind of soft rush, is an organic, eco-friendly material with a refreshing, air-purifying effect. On top of that, it is said to regulate humidity and have antibacterial qualities. Its insulating effect is a real comfort bonus: it is warming in winter and cooling in summer. Agura makes the most of all these properties and appeals to people in search of quality and comfort with a sophisticated Japanese flair. www.yamagataya-group.co.jp The Spinnaker chair by Norwegian furniture manufacturer Hødnebø wears its heart not on its sleeve but on its back: no fabric, no metal, no leather – nothing but a genuine sail covers its rear-facing surface. A sail that can be individually designed. The shape of the chair itself is also inspired by sails: it is as elegant and dynamic as a yacht at full speed. The gently rounded form is meant to provide ergonomic benefits as well – i.e. comfort. The seat consists of three pads of varying firmness – depending on where more or less support is required. The rock-andtilt mechanism is activated by the user’s bodyweight. The chair either adapts dynamically or can be locked into three different positions with a simple movement. But the real secret of its incredible comfort lies in the construction: according to the manufacturer, the hips remain at 90° to the torso no matter what position you adopt. www.spinnaker.no www.hodnebo.no 40 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Number games Consistently cosy We spend half our lives sitting: the average German spends approx. 14 hours a day doing it. After getting up, he drives to work, sits out the day at the office – around 80,000 hours in an average working life – and drives home again. After dinner – which he eats sitting down, of course – he makes for his favourite spot in front of the television. All of which easily adds up to 14 hours. Include the average eight hours he spends asleep as well, and just two hours a day are left for active movement. But even if a growing number of manufacturers are offering ergonomically designed seating furniture and the sofa is till the cosiest place of all, nothing beats a walk in the forest or park for keeping your spine and joints in shape. And settling down on the couch for a well-earned rest afterwards is all the more enjoyable too. Source: www.erfahrung-ist-zukunft.de (Press and Information Office of the Federal Government of Germany) Sit in! A symbiosis of simple forms and inviting comfort is the hallmark of the new Jalis sofa collection from Cor. Its big cushions and round, almost edgeless design make Jalis a visual highlight in virtually any home setting, modern or classic. The apparently loose arrangement of seat and back cushions conveys a casual elegance that is just as good a fit with the 70s as it is with the 21st century. The furniture is available in various premium materials, from patterned fabrics all the way to smart leather. Because its curvaceous form means Jalis looks equally at home when combined with a different base – such as a custommade pedestal – the feet can be removed completely. The creative sofa landscape originates from designer duo Jehs+Laub (see our interview with Jehs+Laub in the 2008 Content Folder “Design in Germany”). Design: Jehs + Laub www.cor.de Products: Sitting I 41 Photo: COR, Jalis (IMM10_TD1303_04) 42 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Photo: die collektion: Confetto (IMM10_TD1303_05a) Unfolding potential Confetto is a modular sofa system that seems to have mastered the art of reconciling practical multifunctionality, flawless comfort and modern, unostentatious aesthetics. On top of that, the system offers several options for individual configurations: two interior widths, four armrest shapes and various cushion styles permit a wide variety of combinations. The sofas come with a covered bed surface and bedding box, an optional armrest tray is available on request. www.die-collection.de (IMM10_TD1303_05b) (IMM10_TD1303_05c) Products: Sitting I 43 Photo: Seefelder Möbelwerkstätten; Kurt (IMM10_TD1303_06a) Powernapping An unusual solution for seating that wants to be more than that: Kurt is an ingeniously versatile “two-in-one” sofa. When open, Kurt functions as a low-lying, highbacked classic sofa with a cubic design and a sloping seat that allows the user to lean back in a comfortable position. When the sofa is closed by folding the backrest forward, it morphs into a uniformly shaped cuboid in next to no time and can be used as a sofa-bed, bench or even an office couch for creative naps between meetings. According to the manufacturer, Seefelder Möbelwerkstätten, Kurt is also the perfect height for a fully-fledged guest bed. www.seefelder.com (IMM10_TD1303_06b) (IMM10_TD1303_06c) 44 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Sleep – our most important basic need after food and drink. A person cannot survive without sleep, even if we tend to shun it for fear of missing out on something. In order to get a healthy night’s rest, it’s essential that nothing disturbs our slumber. The bed and covers have to be the right size, the frame and mattress optimal. We spend an average of eight hours a night in bed, so it’s important for our resting place to adapt to our circumstances. But who can really claim to know his stuff in this day and age? Latex or cold-cure foam? Water? Or perhaps a good old-fashioned interior-sprung mattress after all? Which slatted frame is best for which mattress? Specialised retailers can provide the answers. And on top of that, it’s the only chance you’ll get for some shopping advice in a horizontal position. The experts can always come up with an appropriate solution – even for long-limbed individuals who tower to a height of well over six feet. Text and selection: Lars Mörs Photo: Innovation Randers; Clubber (IMM10_TD1302_02b + c) Contortionist Danish sofa manufacturer Innovation Randers owes no small part of its reputation to its versatile sofas and their cheeky, young designs. But whilst Clubber is as accomplished a contortionist as its stablemates, it makes a decidedly elegant impression and is only available in trendy white leather. Style rules! The sofa with bed and lounge function combines a modern, frameless design with classic details like decorative stitching. A soft upholstery profile and an extremely light-looking, ingenious leg construction manage to reconcile the retro look with the spirit of the times. The amazing contortionist is available with or without walnut armrests. The backrest can be set in a couch, lounge or bed position. Clubber is upholstered with pocket springs and premium-quality foam. The single bed measures a comfortable 200 x 114 cm. www.inno.dk Products: Sleeping I 45 Products: Sleeping Sleep on it! Photo: Accente; Aura (IMM10_TD1302_03) Photo: Team7; Nox (IMM10_TD1302_04) Island of calm Metal-free Aura’s aesthetic appeal lies in the visual symbiosis of movement and tranquillity. The headboard, sleeping surface and foot end seem to form a single, slightly curving plane. The sleeping surface, which is set in a wide loom frame, flows over a flat, compact base with lateral extensions for books or a breakfast tray. The side inlays, which pick up on the colour of the base and accentuate the evenly curved lines, are an attractive detail. Its unusual and extremely comfortable design turn the bed into a safe haven that soothes and pampers the senses. Aura was designed by Martin Ballendat, a name that stands for sophisticated, progressive and award-winning furniture design. www.accente.com Nox – like so many products from the Team 7 label – lets wood do the talking. Treated only with natural herbal oil, it cuts a sensual, powerful figure. There is nothing to distract the eye. The box-shaped design relies on the combination of purism, comfort and the aesthetic impact of its materials. Clearly visible joins in the wood evoke the tradition of the old cabinetmaker’s trade and emphasise the elemental strength of the material. Ingenious details add a certain lightness to the heavy piece of furniture: the set-back base makes the bed look as if it is hovering in mid air. The rounded edges run in opposite directions and join up into an elegant S-shaped line in the corners. The headboard is equally sophisticated. Its graceful lines pick up on the shape of the edges of the bed. Padded and covered with leather, it supports the neck and serves as a backrest, making it equally comfortable whether the user wants to relax and read or sit upright. Its construction is special too: according to the Austrian manufacturer, the beds in the Nox collection are totally metal-free! www.team7.at 46 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Number games Sleeping through 60 to 80 times We turn over approx. a night. Lying on something too hard is one of the reasons behind this frequent change of position. It increases the pressure on certain parts of the body, restricts the blood supply and, as a result, reduces the supply of nutrients. Although changing position compensates for this deficiency, our sleep cycle is interrupted every time we turn over. A mattress with the optimal degree of hardness for the individual user can help ensure more peaceful sleep: from a physiological perspective, turning over 4-12 times a night is quite enough to ensure optimal circulation. What a shame we always forget that once we’re asleep. Source: www.der-schlafberater.de Down-to-earth lightness The cabinetmaker from East Westphalia, a region famous for its furniture, has developed a complete new system that promises exceptional flexibility. Algo permits a wide range of permutations with just a few pieces. The system is suitable for any kind of bedroom or living room usage. And because users’ requirements sometimes change, the furniture can be reconfigured and rearranged later on. Although Algo’s form places it firmly in the category of storage furniture, the bed exudes an unusual lightness and elegance. It’s as if designers Rolf Heide and Peter Kräling had set themselves the goal of liberating the sizeable volumes from their heaviness. Design: Rolf Heide und Peter Kräling www.interluebke.de Products: Sleeping I 47 Photo: Interlübke, Algo (IMM10_TD1302_01) 48 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Whether woven or knotted, sheep’s wool or synthetic, from the Orient or from Europe – carpets are on their way in again. Especially designer carpets in all sorts of variations. A growing number of classic product designers are getting to grips with the barely three-dimensional floor covering and cheerfully flouting the conventions. 3D effects, carpets made of wood segments or rag rugs that are more like a puzzle than a home textile are making carpets look fresher and younger than they have for a long time. Classic designs in subtle shades are just as popular as loud colours, surprise effects and playful patterns. There is a huge choice of sizes, shapes and materials for adding an individual touch to any room. Some add warmth, others signal a certain aloofness. The carpet becomes an expression of the owner’s personality, which itself can range from soft and cuddly all the way to reserved. But regardless of whether the choice of a carpet is governed by its cool aesthetics or its soft pile: it definitely helps create a cosy atmosphere. In bathrooms too, by the way, which are rapidly catching up with classic living space when it comes to the feel-good factor. Text and selection: Lars Mörs Photo: Jab Anstoetz; Spot (IMM10_TD1304_01) Heavy quality The Spot carpet by Jab Anstoetz is an up-to-date frisé in 44 timelessly modern colours with a pile weight of 2,700 g/m2. There are no limits to the size of the carpet: customers can order any size they want. The various grades in the collection are all made from pure new wool from New Zealand. The high effective pile weight of the four structures is another indication of the carpets’ top quality. According to the Bielefeld-based family company, a label famous for its exclusive home textiles, extensive studies have shown that none of the various grades represent any risk for allergy suffers. www.jab.de Products: Carpets I 49 Products: Carpets Carpets with Character Photo: Temahome; Furoshiki (IMM10_TD1304_03) Photo: Schönfeld; Strukturteppiche (IMM10_TD1304_04) Japanese puzzle Exclusive footwarmer The unusual, asymmetrical shape of Furoshiki, a carpet from Portuguese furniture manufacturer Temahome, makes this textile artwork look as if it is in motion. At first glance, you could easily think the multi-coloured pattern had been randomly generated, although that isn’t actually the case. In fact it is an interesting puzzle. Its name is a reference to the popular Japanese art of wrapping gifts. Furoshiki was created by Portuguese designer Miguel Vieira Baptista. The pattern is a combination of six different colours. The carpet is hand-made out of 100% New Zealand wool. www.temahome.com The carpets made by the Schönfeld manufactory are custom-made in Saxony. In Schönfeld’s typical graphic style, they feature a linear structure created by different pile lengths. The combination of materials is extremely variable in terms of colour and combinations. The textured carpets are hand-tufted out of top-quality linen mix yarn and wool. No additional backing is used: this ensures the warmth of underfloor heating can penetrate the carpet efficiently and means no non-slip coatings or mats are required. www.cgg-schoenfeld.de 50 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Number games Tying the knot Carpets can range in quality from 15,000 to more than 400,000 knots per square metre. As runners, dirt traps and cosy islands, they help take some of the hardness out of life. Besides the material and neat workmanship, the number of knots is definitely also a quality factor – and one which, with a little patience, the customer can easily check and compare with the number stated. All you need is a ruler. Count the number of knots over a length of one centimetre, square the result and multiply it by 10,000. 5 knots per centimetre are equivalent to approx. 250,000 knots per square metre (kn/m²), for example. On top of that, every section should form a neat square – i.e. approx. 6x6 knots rather than 7x8. All askew "Everybody knows the best ideas are born in the bathtub,” says designer Wiebke Hoffmann of her new Tiles rug for Hey-Sign. The design was inspired by a slightly irregular arrangement of tiles. Although to start with it might just look like an unruly composition of felt squares, closer inspection reveals an extremely clever design in which the gaps undermine the impression that the individual squares are permanently joined together. Even so, this carpet is perfectly safe to walk on: the only thing that slips is your grasp of the facts. Tiles plays a trick on its beholder – the optical illusion is just about perfect. The carpet is made of 5 mm thick pure new wool felt. It is available in the sizes 70 x 200 cm, 140 x 200 cm and 180 x 240 cm and in 36 different colours. www.hey-sign.de Products: Carpets I 51 Photo: Hey-Sign, Tiles (IMM10_TD1304_02) 52 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Furniture looks a little different every spring too, and style and colour trends change the face of interior design. But in contrast to fashion, developments in design cannot be entirely explained by changing tastes and the desire to reinvent oneself over and over again. Of course the arrival of the miniskirt says something about our outlook on life too, but the way we furnish our homes is more than that. It is a direct reflex triggered by social influences, a response in which our life patterns, everyday rituals, ideals, relationship structures, consumer mindset, social conditions, world views and aspirations express themselves in material form. Anybody who observes furniture design and interior design eventually ends up asking not just how but why these developments occur. The twelve interior lifestyle trends presented here shed light on both aspects: the aesthetic and functional features of the products and the motives for current and future interior lifestyles. Text and idea: Frank A. Reinhardt Photos: Karsten Jipp The photographer: Just plain genius Graphic designer Karsten Jipp works as an art director in a large corporate design agency. He lives and works in Berlin, where he discovered photography as an outlet for totally unencumbered creativity and soon attracted a large fan community with the snapshots and artistic scenographies he published on the photocase platform. His photos reveal the absurdity of the everyday and the poetry of little things; they symbolise joy and sadness, megalomania and vulnerability. But his pictures are always full of humour too – and never entirely without sympathy. The hallmark of his visual language: staging himself as a protagonist with (all too) human sensibilities. He slips into any role and doesn’t shrink from any manipulation to capture his surprisingly clear-sighted perspective of the world on camera. The staged-yet-spontaneous quality of his pictures, however, is entirely due to his working technique: the automatic shutter release gives him just ten seconds to put himself in the picture. 12 interior lifestyle trends I 53 12 interior lifestyle trends: Living the future today 01 _Multiflexibility Photo: Koelnmesse; Karsten Jipp (IMM10_TD0601_01) 02 _Public Lifebase - Private Carebase Photo: Koelnmesse; Karsten Jipp (IMM10_TD0601_02) Wanted: jack of all trades Home – the ultimate weapon in turbulent times Living is becoming more flexible, furnishing a passion. Some people move house more frequently, others are content with a spontaneous reshuffle from time to time. Whether it’s for young or old, big and roomy or small and compact: furniture has to be increasingly flexible in terms of positioning, add-ons and usage areas. In the not too distant future, even shower panels or kitchen elements could move house with their owners thanks to plug&play technology. Even today, modular shelving systems ought to be variably combinable, sofas – with a corner element that can be attached to either side, of course – and beds should feature an attractive back so that they can be placed anywhere in the room, and chairs are only truly friends for life if they cut an equally good figure in the kitchen as they do in the living room. Multiflexible solutions at product and floor plan level are the answer to modern needs. In future, there will be just as little room for specialisation and rigid form typologies as there will be for rigid living structures. Walls can, after all, be moved. Bedroom? Children’s room, study or fitness room? Multiple-family dwelling, single-family house or combined residential and office building? Who’s willing to pin themselves down in this day and age? In the past, it was not unheard of for stressed managers to sleep at the office – today’s flexible employees fall asleep over their notebooks stretched out on the sofa in their home office. Nowadays it is virtually impossible to protect the home from the public eye: it is used as much for presentation as it is for regeneration. The home is becoming the control centre and thus the cure-all for every need, be it of a professional or private nature. It allows us to do a quick change act between our public and private selves, to withdraw from the lounge-diningoutdoor area to our private rooms and fight our battles on familiar territory. 54 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 03 _Simple Techness Photo: Koelnmesse; Karsten Jipp (IMM10_TD0601_03) 04 _Spiritual Renaissance Photo: Koelnmesse; Karsten Jipp (IMM10_TD0601_04) The new culture – technology with understatement The higher meaning of wellness Technology surrounds us everywhere. Mastering it completely would be too much for us – but we aren’t willing or able to do without it, either. The computerisation of the working world, the multimedia equipment in our living rooms and system-controlled building automation have become part of everyday life. We long for the simplicity of times gone by. A phenomenon that’s already made its mark on mobile phones will soon start affecting technical features in the furnishing sector, too: we want fewer buttons and more comfort and convenience. Rather than being made a show of, technical gadgets are being integrated: in walls, furniture, beautiful things. At the same time, our need for functions and security is growing – especially at home. Our hope: thanks to the convergence of new technologies, everything will function quickly and easily, making our everyday lives uncomplicated and secure. “Just click this button” – and everything will be fine. Then technology will be sexy again! The health and wellness boom is alive and kicking. But there’s a lot more to health than yoghurt for healthy intestinal flora and more to wellness than a special shower gel or a candlelit soak in the tub. The home, and above all the bathroom, is a multifunctional platform for fitness, regeneration, cleansing and emotional experiences. And there’s plenty to do, for nowadays health isn’t merely the absence of illness. It goes hand in hand with physical performance, longevity, emotional equilibrium and mental strength. Healthcare is becoming a spiritual task to which the home’s materials, furniture and layout structures have to adapt. Feng Shui and oiled solid wood furniture were only the beginning – nowadays people are upgrading their homes with Vasati (an integral concept from India based on bioenergetic living and building), pollutantabsorbing wallpapers and magnetic field therapy mattresses. In the private sphere, faith and science can co-exist in perfect harmony. The occupants’ wellbeing is all that matters. 12 interior lifestyle trends I 55 05 _Natural Green Photo: Koelnmesse; Karsten Jipp (IMM10_TD0601_05) 06 _Outdoor Living Room Photo: Koelnmesse; Karsten Jipp (IMM10_TD0601_06) Sustainability? Of course! But how? At home beneath the stars It’s not “only” a question of worrying about their own health and avoiding toxins in the house any more. Consumers have long since internalised the fact that the natural system we live in needs protection and are asking questions about the sustainability of the products they buy. Furniture is less abstract than the debates about energy sources. It can be experienced with the senses and is like a visible statement of good will. Environmental protection makes a difference, even on a small scale. But where to start? When belief in progress fades, people seek reassurance in things that have stood the test of time and go for natural materials. Others try to face up to their newly accepted responsibility by attempting to devise sustainable concepts with new technologies and materials. And so solid wood beds stand alongside cupboards made of modern laminates and recycled furniture rubs shoulders with WPC* shelving and ultralight chairs made of polycarbonate and magnesium. Couch potatoes are so not cool. Whereas relaxing at home – be it alone, with buddies or business associates – very definitely is. So why not just bring that street café and beer garden feel to your own terrace? Gardens are being professionally designed again, some traditionally, some with a contemporary motto, some based on Feng Shui and others with a strictly architectural style. As in the Baroque, the garden is becoming an expression of cultivated taste again, nature an extension of our living space. The boundaries between indoors and outdoors are flowing, and the furniture defies unambiguous classification too. Weatherproof furniture, be it rustic, playful or dignified, is adapting to the need for the new outdoor lifestyle. Especially in built-up areas, the zeal for fresh air and nature is flourishing despite the urban flair. Opposites that had hitherto only attracted one another are now merging in perfection with modern architecture. wood plastic composite * 56 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 07 _Homing Photo: Koelnmesse; Karsten Jipp (IMM10_TD0601_07) My home is my world This trend is probably as old as the clay hut and will no doubt accompany us for ever. And yet: never before has it seemed as valuable as it does today, our own little world with its lovingly designed four walls behind which – symbolically speaking, of course – we can withdraw from the hostile world outside. It is becoming even more beautiful as snug, cosy materials and colours spread patchworklike throughout our self-composed homes, along with – most importantly of all – lots and lots of textiles, some of them bright and colourful, others subtle and natural, on walls and windows, floors and all kinds of seating furniture. But these days nobody wants to barricade them- selves in or hide themselves away any more. Instead the cocoon is opened up in small doses to welcome the part of the world that is perceived as related. A network of friends is making up for weakening family ties and the dwindling sense of loyalty in the working world. People want their friends to feel just as much at home as they do. A spacious area for living/cooking/eating, a generously proportioned dining table as the focal point and a decent multimedia setup are all part of modern living. The home is becoming a prestigious, friendly gesture – it is calling card and invitation in one. 12 interior lifestyle trends I 57 08 _Interior Concepts Photo: Koelnmesse; Karsten Jipp (IMM10_TD0601_08) Reinventing rooms As our moral concepts and life patterns change, new floor plan models are emerging too. Even today, various living zones are merging into spacious all-in-one rooms. The latest architectural concepts propagate one-room homes in which only the sleeping and private areas are separated off. The walls between the kitchen, dining area and living room are falling fast, just as they are between the bedroom and bathroom, which are merging into a private spa equipped only with such partitions as are absolutely essential for regulating the indoor climate (but with no toilet). In the long term, however, the need for more space and the expansion of the “family” circle to include friends and guests will lead to greater differentiation of rooms and their contents again, without surrendering the spaciousness of a single main recreation room. Rooms with functions for individual needs – like a computer corner, playroom, virtual dressing rooms, study, fitness or meditation room, reading gallery or the good old ironing room – will be used as areas of retreat. That’s just as feasible in a patchwork house for a patchwork family as it is in modularly structured rooms for single households. 58 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 09 _Clean Cover Photo: Koelnmesse; Karsten Jipp (IMM10_TD0601_09) 10 _Megatrend Design Photo: Koelnmesse; Karsten Jipp (IMM10_TD0601_10) The art of concealment Design or perish! Even though the minimalist furnishing style surrendered its dominance long ago and has to compete with a variety of neo-baroque, rustic-purist and sumptuously curved stylistic elements, the “less is more” maxim has been so internalised that, for most people these days, a tidy look is simply a must. Chaotic disorder would only disrupt the aesthetics we identify ourselves with. And the smoothness needn’t look superficial – it’s just plain smart. Personal and unusual items are integrated into the design concept without further ado. A series of family photos? No problem, as long as the colours fit in with the furnishings. Tangled cables and technical features vanish behind smooth fronts, can be lowered out of sight or otherwise integrated, just as smooth surfaces are preferred over a display of decorative knick-knacks. These aesthetics have become so well-established that we are visually offended by protruding handles and wild about “push-to-open” technology. Clean Cover, the art of concealment, is an expression of the desire for order and perfectionism. It makes us feel as if we’ve got everything under control – at least in the showpiece we call home. A trend that’s become so dominant we don’t even notice it any more: no design is a no-go. The absence of more or less well-designed surroundings is meanwhile so immediately and painfully offensive to society’s sense of style that we declare battle on it in TV shows, sending a well-meaning design task force to liberate the distressed family from their light oak wall units and prescribe a course of smart, colourful, life-affirming furnishings that will turn them into modern human beings. Good taste has become a prerequisite for a healthy sense of self-worth, and we identify ourselves with our furnishings just as much as with our clothes. It seems as if the dreams of the founding fathers of design – the Arts and Crafts Movement, Werkbund, Bauhaus & Co. – might just come true after all. Today we consider beautiful forms and attractive surroundings indispensable for our personal well-being. The democratisation of the design world has long since become reality. 12 interior lifestyle trends I 59 11 _Good Old Friends Photo: Koelnmesse; Karsten Jipp (IMM10_TD0601_11) 12 _Urban Sprawl Photo: Koelnmesse; Karsten Jipp (IMM10_TD0601_12) A reunion with old acquaintances The city as natural habitat Of course we want to see something new. Like fashion, to which it is beginning to exhibit an alarming resemblance in some cases, design caters to the consumer’s desire for the new, the original and the fresh. And yet many people are fed up with the modernity-obsessed games with new forms. Neo-baroque was only the first step towards cutting the cord with minimalism. Today purist, organic, modern, ethnic-folkloric and historicising styles in all shapes and colours are co-existing peacefully. We are experiencing an eclectic mix of styles in which the accomplished combination of new and old, of the familiar and the innovative, of concrete and wallpaper is considered modern. Whatever the future might look like, it will be far less futuristic than designers prophesised back in the 1970s. The chairs, armchairs and tables of today’s most famous designers bear a strong resemblance to classics without being mere copies: different dimensions, a technical upgrade, a material used in an unexpected way or a new constructional approach for achieving an archetypal form are adapting tried and trusted solutions to the high-tech age. And telling us that there’s no need to reinvent the world. Just parts of it. The background is obvious: these days family life in the country seems like a pretty conservative option. Which is why anyone who can afford to makes sure their offspring get a good road safety education in early childhood and do not turn into rural mucky pups, enjoying instead a cool life in the city complete with roof terrace and backyard idyll, not to mention the launderette and café round the corner. Since classic family structures are becoming increasingly unusual anyway and a growing number of singles and – thanks to demographic developments – fun-loving overfifties (on their own or living with a partner) want to live in a household that’s close to the action, cities are becoming more attractive again. Their dense infrastructure conveys a sense of security and means everything is within easy reach. Refurbished and converted industrial buildings or newly developed harbour districts by the river embody the ideal of urban living and enhance the city’s image. The more the surrounding area is developed and cities endeavour to create green areas, traffic-calmed residential neighbourhoods and a flourishing street life, the more people will be drawn to urban centres. The new rural exodus stands for the desire for independence, modernity and, above all, mobility – whatever age you happen to be. 60 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Photo: Flötotto; Regalsystem 355 (IMM10_TD0901_01) Short cut: Home trends I 61 Home trends at the beginning of 2010 At home indoors and out Homing is experiencing a boom. Despite or perhaps precisely because of the financial crisis, people are quite happy to spend their time at home, where they have the freedom to design their surroundings however they like and are master of all they survey. Living means spending an average of 340 days a year in one and the same place: home. People are spending substantial amounts of time in their eat-in kitchens, home cinemas and private spas. On top of that, the latest interior design and furniture trends promise to bring new impetus and a new sense of fun to the way we furnish, design and live in our homes. And the individualisation trend that has been holding its own for years continues unbroken. As a result, people are attaching growing importance to original, perhaps even unique furnishings – not only in their indoor living space, but in the way they design their garden, balcony or terrace as well. The last season saw above-average investments in this segment. And – especially if predictions of a sunny 2010 prove true – it seems more than likely that sales of garden furniture will continue to grow. For all the diversity, there are always certain items of furniture or accessories that are particularly popular and others that people find it easier to part from. The following list shows some of the latest developments: What’s on its way out? _Small dining tables _1-2-3-seater suites without any functions _Dark rustic kitchens _Smooth covering fabrics for upholstered furniture _Bulky furniture Text: Ursula Geismann, Association of German Furniture Industries What’s here to stay? _The megacolour white for upholstery coverings and _storage furniture surfaces _Wall units with flat screen TVs and long sideboards, _highboards and lowboards _The “kitchen – dining – living area” as a spatial unit _Aubergine shades for a dignified splash of colour _Furniture that looks good from the back too and can _be placed in the middle of the room _Adjustable upholstered furniture _Walk-in wardrobes _Rococo ornaments as patterns, e.g. as woven covering _fabrics with a velvet-like surface and relief character _Cross Design as a lifestyle guarantee: furniture by _Joop!, Esprit & Co. _Furniture classics as a timeless value _Bioethanol fireplaces _Themed children’s rooms with e.g. a “Princess” or _“Pirate” motif What’s on its way in? _Dining armchairs that you can sit on comfortably for _a long time _Garden furniture that looks like living room furniture _Outdoor kitchens and showers _Lounge chairs for chilling _Private spa oases where the bedroom and bathroom _merge into a single unit _Large-format dining tables _Blue covering fabrics _Dark wood, preferably in combination with glass and _stainless steel _Feminine forms: organically designed upholstered _furniture _High-gloss and handleless kitchens _Gold for accentuation on e.g. little cupboards, chair _frames or decorative cushions _Greenline furniture _LED lighting technology in cupboards and shelving 62 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Trend Book I 63 The imm cologne Trend Book Post-Big Bang Aesthetics The latest Trend Book from the imm cologne furnishing fair presents the Interior Trends 2010 Conflicting tendencies dominate the design scene: the experimental on the one hand and durability and quality on the other Photo: Interior Trend Rehab; Koelnmesse; Constantin Meyer (IMM10_TBK0203_02) 64 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Photo: Interior Trend Discipline; Koelnmesse; Constantin Meyer (IMM10_TBK0204_03) Trend Book I 65 experimental designs play with our expectations of the furniture’s comfort or functionality, staging these expectations as an image that fails to deliver on its promises. Family-minded, harmony-seeking circles, on the other hand, are reflecting on the more robust quality of traditional shapes and patterns from all over the world, on the virtues of the self-made and things that appear to be self-made (Comfort Zone). The innovation-minded are seeking the pure quality of the naked, decoration-free form with a single-mindedness so unyielding it almost hurts (Rehab). Photo: Interior Trend Comfort Zone; Koelnmesse; C. Meyer (IMM10_ TBK0202_01) A rebellious spirit seems to be driving design right now. Even though not everything can be put down to the global experience of the economic crisis, in the eyes of the imm cologne’s Trendboard it is nevertheless the driving force behind the anticipated strong divergence in four very different directions. The four most important developments for the furniture and interior design industry presented in the Trend Book “Interior Trends 2010” are called “Discipline”, “Trickery”, “Comfort Zone” and “Rehab”. Despite all the differences, there is one striking common denominator: in all four Interior Trends, quality is an absolute principle. Whilst more conservative minds want design to swear an oath of allegiance to the original Bauhaus aesthetics and demand absolute perfection (Discipline), the jolly, popular camp is suddenly taking the play with quotations of classic forms, improvisations and illusions very seriously indeed and rejoicing in creative quality as distinct from perfect workmanship (Trickery). Many This year’s international imm cologne Trendboard, consisting of designers Bertjan Pot and Cecilie Manz, architect and designer Johanna Grawunder, specialist journalist Marcus Fairs and materials and colour expert Giulio Ridolfo, sees a general feeling of uncertainty as the main motive for these very different aesthetic developments. Prosperity and social harmony seem just as much in jeopardy as the natural balance. In response, creatives and consumers alike are looking for new answers and/ or consistency in design. That means having a good clear out and rummaging in the depths of the closet to find solutions that are viable for the future. After all, any new commitment is always preceded by a stripping down process, or at the very least the renunciation of old patterns. Photo: Interior Trend Trickery; Koelnmesse; C. Meyer (IMM10_ TBK0201_03) 66 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 The Trend Book A Reference Work for the Future For the last six years, the imm cologne has been convening an international panel of experts to identify the central themes for the interior design of the coming season: the Trendboard, with an annually changing line-up that brings together some of the world’s most influential designers, architects, specialist journalists and material experts. During a two-day workshop, organised by the German Design Council, the panel compares and discusses the impressions of current tendencies in design and society it has collected in the preceding months. It isn’t only current developments in design that are evaluated – the state of mind and needs found in the relevant consumer groups are taken as the respective starting point for the formulation of an Interior Trend. In the next stage, the manifestations of the Interior Trend are defined in detail on the basis of material and colour samples. The 72-page Trend Book depicts these trends with sensitive synopses of the formal and emotional motifs, lavishly produced photos and detailed information about the colour values and material collages. Thanks to its autumn publication date, the Trend Book is able to take stock of the spring presentations and evaluate the developments that will make it to the first major furnishing and order show of the year, the imm cologne 2010, according to their potential for the interior design of the future. This definitive book is compulsory reading for the furnishing industry and is available for a nominal charge of 50 euros. It provides a compact overview of what’s happening in the design scene right now and is a valuable orientation aid for exhibitors, trade visitors and journalists. Photo: Koelnmesse (IMM10_TBK0205_02) Photo: Koelnmesse (IMM10_TBK0205_03) Photo: Koelnmesse (IMM10_TBK0205_04) Further information: www.imm-cologne.com Editor's note: Information about the manufacturers and sources of the products shown in the photographs can be found in the Trend Book Interior Trends 2010. Photo: Koelnmesse (IMM10_TBK0205_05) Trend Book I 67 Presentation The Trend Book Press Conference in Stockholm (09/2009) Video Podcast (DVD) Photo: Koelnmesse; FAR (IMM10_TD0301_02) Photo: Koelnmesse; FAR (IMM10_TD0301_03) 68 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Photo: PP Meubler; Clothes tree; Jeppe Gudmundsen-Holmgreen (IMM10_TD0801_02) Designer’s Voice I 69 Cecilie Manz “Great news!” Interior Trends 2010. Her interpretation of the trends in Pure Village (Hall 3.2) at the imm cologne 2010 is certain to be a highly interesting installation. 1. What direction is Green Design going in? I believe the whole vocabulary and understanding of concepts like “green design”, “eco”, “sustainability” and so on will become a perfectly natural part of our language and work, so much so that they’ll be taken for granted. It will be not caring about these criteria that will be perceived as extreme and wrong. But this process will take time, it will happen in small steps rather than overnight. Photo: Cecilie Manz; Koelnmesse; Lutz Sternstein (IMM10_TD0801_01) Cecilie Manz is considered one of the most prominent representatives of the young and successful product and furniture design currently coming from Denmark and was recently presented with the Bruno Mathsson Award 2009. Born in 1972, the designer trained in Copenhagen and Helsinki and has been running her own design studio in Copenhagen since 1998. Her clients include firms like Fritz Hansen, Mooment, LightYears, Nils Holger Moormann and glass manufacturer Holmegaard. Her Minima glass series has won various words, including the Danish Design Prize. Besides her glass design, Cecilie Manz is mainly known for her lamps and furniture. Her poetic approach – at its most obvious in her experimental works, one-offs and limited editions like the Pluralis chair for Mooment – is also apparent in her products for a wider audience. As a member of the imm cologne’s current Trendboard, she was one of those responsible for identifying the 2. Are there any new ideas or technologies in Green Design, and which approaches dominate when it comes to creating a broader production basis? Right now design is showing more interest in wood and other raw, natural materials – you could almost say because they look “right” and give you an instant feeling of going in the right direction. The next step, where new materials are associated with positive effects, will take more time to achieve broad acceptance – not only with consumers, but in terms of the production process as a whole. I also believe there’s a trend towards a new aesthetic purity or modesty – simply because we’re pretty jaded with these past few years. Maybe this movement will continue to go hand in hand with the “green” approach for a long time. That would be great news! 3. Will the market support the furniture industry’s development towards more product sustainability? I really hope both parties will work together and open up new ways. It’s like a spiral that just needs to go in the right direction; then it works. 4 .Are companies tending to rely on established products in the current crisis or are they particularly keen to innovate? I see both reactions. Some companies are really eager to seek new ways, whereas others are just carrying on as before, but on a smaller scale. 70 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Photo: Fritz Hansen; Essay; Design: Cecilie Manz (IMM10_TD0801_04) 5. Today more and more trends are co-existing alongside one another. Do you see any one dominant trend in interior design or product design? More than anything else, a trend is a reflection or a distillation of everything that’s going on in society. That’s why we’re seeing such a wide range of different ways to live, work or dress. Our age isn’t so much a time as a multi-time: instead of one phenomenon occurring at one time, we’re seeing a multitude of phenomena all at once. 6. Where – from which cultures, disciplines, media, industries or scientific fields – is the most important impetus for trend developments coming from? All of the above. That’s why collaboration is so important. 7. What signals are you expecting from the next imm cologne? I’m actually hoping to see something totally unexpected… 8. What imm cologne show or event do you definitely not want to miss? I haven’t actually made a plan, I rarely do. I like strolling around. One good piece can do the trick and make it a good fair. Further information: www.ceciliemanz.com Designer’s Voice I 71 Photo: Limited edition chair by Mooment; Pluralis; Jeppe Gudmundsen-Holmgreen (IMM10_TD0801_03) 72 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Photo: Schmidt Küchen, Aurora; Design: Britta Chantal Tibo (IMM10_TD0802_05) Designer’s Voice I 73 Britta Chantal Tibo, RoomDoctor “Wing chairs and wheelbarrows are amongst the protagonists of a new country style.” a nation hitherto known for its scepticism towards formoney advice on home design. The Americans and British, however, are old hands: when it comes to redecorating the living room, not a single carpet, sofa or pair of curtains is purchased without a famous interior designer presenting a concept first. Photo: Britta Chantal Tibo, RoomDoctor (IMM10_TD0802_01) It’s normally the designers who get asked about the latest trends. Which is understandable in view of the fact that designers usually have to think two, three or even four years ahead in order to create products that are still upto-date by the time they’re launched. But when it comes to the question of how people are furnishing their houses in the present, what ideas they associate with their home, what they hope for from their new furnishings or how their aspirations are changing, it’s the interior designers and interior architects who know what’s available and what goes down well. They are closer to the customers and the market and more firmly rooted in the present. Today their professional empathy and good taste are more in demand than ever before. Nothing against computer programmes that allow you to refurnish your house on the PC monitor. But at the very latest since Tine Wittler and her show (the German equivalent of “Changing Rooms”) came to the country’s TV screens, the profession of interior designer has become popular in Germany too – A trend that the Germany-wide RoomDoctor network is making the most of. Another of its members’ aims is to do away with preconceptions that cast the interior designer in an elitist milieu. RoomDoctor is a pool of freelance architects and interior designers who are happy to share their expert know-how with clients even where smaller projects are concerned. They use the Internet as an uncomplicated contact forum and inspire confidence with transparent prices and predefined conditions. Degreed architect Britta Chantal Tibo is one of them. Born in Belgium, she studied in Saarbrücken before founding her own firm in the Saarland in 2006. She is active in the shop, trade fair and housing sectors and has also been specialising in kitchens and bathrooms for the last few years. 1. Today more and more trends are co-existing alongside one another. Is there any one dominant trend in interior design or product design? I think the trend of keeping lots of things white is still very strong. Apple and its products led the way years ago, and it’s become a very dominant colour in the car, furniture and fashion sectors. At the same time, the avant-garde is focusing on a new “ruralness”, symbolised by light, bare, unprocessed wood. It’s often used to create a contrast with clear, white surfaces. The genuineness of the products is also crucial. If the plans include wood, the preference is for the real thing rather than an artificial wood finish. Leather is preferred over artificial leather and silk over synthetic fabrics. Wing chairs and wheelbarrows – as well as new interpretations of unostentatious furniture designs that evoke the idea of a simple lifestyle – are amongst the protagonists of a new country style. Global issues like climate protection and sustainability are encouraging the development 74 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Photo: Schmidt Küchen, Aurora (IMM10_TD0802_02) of a new trend with products designed to be as close to natural as possible. It seems as if people are longing for a clear, bright design with genuine materials that bring them closer to nature. 2. As a countermovement to minimalism, the NeoBaroque seems to have lost some of its charm. Are we seeing something like a New Objectivity? And how does that fit in with the renaissance of decorative wallpaper? The so-called “Neo-Baroque” style has only just reached the normal consumer and is one of the big-selling trends. But such extreme trends usually have a comparatively short lifetime. People find opulence way too demanding. And that kind of extreme makes it almost impossible to produce a new look with simple means, because it’s difficult to create new highlights in a lavishly designed room. What seems exciting to start with eventually loses its visual impact. Although minimalism and New Objectivity as originated by the Bauhaus have never gone away entirely, in the long run most people just don’t feel at home in rooms with a strictly minimalist design. However, I happen to think that a clearly designed room can be a huge advantage because it leaves scope for trends and the user’s personality. That’s why wallpapers, which have been featuring vegetal motifs like wood, stone or fur for years now, can be one way of following and promoting trends. 3. Where are the most important influences for trend developments coming from? Photo: Schmidt Küchen, Aurora (IMM10_TD0802_03) There are lots of sources. When it comes to colour trends, I tend to look to the fashion industry. Because it brings out so many different collections within a single year, it can react very quickly and pick up on new influences faster that any other sector. At a more global level, I think the focus is currently on things like nature, country life, Africa, ecopolitics, the family and practicability. 4. What about Green Design? How can people demonstrate their ecological awareness when it comes to interior design? It’s becoming increasingly important to be aware of how sustainable your actions are. You can actually start thinking about Green Design even before you buy something new, by asking yourself whether the new product is necessarily better or more useful than what you’ve already got. But above all, as consumers, we should start taking ecological aspects into account more when choosing a new interior: rather than just basing our decisions on the surface, we ought to ask what materials and how much energy have gone into making the product, and how it can be disposed of later on. As an architect, I’m very much aware of my possibilities for planning sustainable interiors. I try to be as resource-friendly as possible by e.g. using domestically grown wood and products with a long lifespan. I also use recyclable products and incorporate energy-saving measures into the design. Designer’s Voice I 75 Photo: Schmidt Küchen, Aurora (IMM10_TD0802_04) 5. Creativity by the bag: Will people be spending more money on professional interior design advice in future? And if so, why? I think consulting is becoming one of the key issues in interior design. Buzzwords like “homing” show that interior lifestyle is becoming more and more important. People long for a home, for a place they can retreat to, as a way compensating for the fast-moving pace of their working lives. The time they spend in their own four walls is precious. Their aspirations and need for advice are growing along with their appreciation of their homes. 6. You’re a freelance architect and will be taking part in the imm cologne. How come? Along with my colleagues from the RoomDoctor network, I’ll be at the Pure Village “market square” during the Public Days to help visitors with an acute “room disorder” find a cure. We’ll identify their wants and problems and talk about how they can make the most of their rooms. It’s an attempt – in collaboration with the fair – to meet the need for advice we were talking about just now. On top of that, in short lectures on the Pure Village stage, I’ll be explaining the classic problems involved with designing a room and presenting potential solutions. Further information: www.brittatibo.de www.roomdoctor.de 76 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Udo Traeger is head of Koelnmesse’s imm cologne and interzum divisions. His strategy is the intelligent linking of design and business. He fosters the long-term development of the imm cologne’s design expertise, for instance by promoting the Trendboard and Trend Book, and is the driving force behind new, courageous highlights such as the new Pure Village presentation format. At the same time, he realised the growing importance of the POS at an early stage. For the imm cologne 2010, he has been promoting the intense integration of commercial agencies and various national and international trading platforms: from top dealers all the way to buying and marketing groups, at meetings with dealers in Japan, Moscow and the USA. In a further effort to strengthen the POS, Traeger also introduced the practice of inviting sales staff from trading companies. As inventor of the D³ Design talents segment, he is equally committed to the promotion of new talent. In our interview, he explains his vision for the future of the Cologne furnishing fair. His comments indicate just how central the imm cologne’s position “between two stools” is if it takes its most important role seriously: as mediator between manufacturers and dealers, creatives and consumers. And in that respect, Udo Traeger has plenty of ideas on how to get things moving. Interview Udo Traeger I 77 Interview Udo Traeger, Koelnmesse “We see ourselves as the most modern furniture store in the world.” Photo: Koelnmesse; Andreas Körner (IMM10_TD0701_01) 78 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 everyone involved makes a joint effort. In January, Cologne is totally taken over by design. The international design season opens with the imm cologne and the independent “Passagen” design festival, the most famous design event in Germany. That turns Cologne into a platform for current trends and tendencies in design, lifestyle and interior design. What points of contact are there? We’ve got a wonderful tradition in Cologne – great shops and great furniture that’s displayed not only in the many showrooms but in classic furniture stores as well. So why not link this potential with the action context of the imm cologne more? That’s why we started by approaching the players with bigger downtown premises, like the organisers of the KAP Forum or Design Post. We got together and decided that, in future, we want to present a more united front and collaborate on joint initiatives. Photo: Koelnmesse; Andreas Körner (IMM10_TD0701_04) Mr. Traeger, at present the furniture fairs are very much under the influence of the design cult. Do you have a vision of the imm cologne’s future? The modern trade fair of the future will present a great deal more concepts and more content – at all levels, not just in relation to design. We will have to put more emphasis on depicting the transitions between the living and dining areas, indoor and outdoor, bedroom and bathroom. That’s why, at the imm cologne 2010, we’re making a start with this small core element, Pure Village, and sowing an important seed for our development. At the end of the day, our ultimate aim is to be the most modern furniture and interior design fair in the world. That’s a big goal. But what about the details? Even though they’re on a tight schedule, a lot of people who visit the imm cologne want to see the city and design shows as well as the trade fair. In the past, there’s sometimes been a lack of harmony in the way the fair and city interact. Are there any plans to improve that? In the last two years we’ve instigated various things that are now starting to take effect. For everybody taking part in the furniture and design event that has grown up around the imm cologne, one thing is vitally important: Cologne needs a more positive image as far as interior design is concerned. That’s why the broad-based international marketing campaign we’re launching gives special emphasis to Cologne as a location – especially in context with Paris and Milan. And it’s important that How much of that will be apparent to visitors, apart from the communication campaigns of course? For this year, i.e. the imm cologne 2010, we’ve joined forces with partners from the media and other sponsors and put together a big joint opening event for the Cologne furniture, interior design and design week: the Cologne Design Night. We’re looking for as many participants as possible so that we can get all the important and interesting people together in one place. We want to give the sector an opportunity to get together and exchange ideas outside the many committees and in a more concentrated form than in the globalised arena – we’re aiming to provide a relaxed atmosphere so that people will enjoy coming here. What kind of setting are you aiming for at the event? Are you planning to roll out the red carpet? Yes, it will be a red-carpet event. It will be held in the Alter Wartesaal, the old waiting room of Cologne’s main station – it’s a very interesting historic building with an extremely attractive interior. We and our partners will of course be inviting everybody who’s exhibiting here in Cologne and at the trade fair, but there will also be a lot of VIPs and creatives attending too, like the members of the Trendboard, for instance. It’s also where the awards will be presented – both for the D³ Contest, the competition held in connection with our platform for up-and-coming designers, and the Interior Innovation Award. So there will definitely be a few highlights – and plenty of good food, good music and good conversation. I imagine visitors will notice the new Pure Village presentation format more than anything else, right? Yes, because the major players from downtown cologne will be participating in Pure Village too – the KAP Forum and Design Post, for instance – and show- Interview Udo Traeger I 79 ing a selection from their collections. Pure Village provides the ideal setting: it’s a new, compact format, a mix of object-centric presentations and more conceptual installations. We’re also delighted that Loewe, one of the top brands in home entertainment, is taking part in Pure Village as well. There will be leading brands from the bathroom sector too, like Dornbracht, Grohe, Burgbad or Aqua Cultura, as well as lighting manufacturers like Brandini and Modular Lighting. Cutting-edge textile firms like Kvadrat and Nya Nordiska find the Pure Village format just as interesting as carpet specialist Vorwerk or accessories brand Authentics. And they’ll be presenting themselves alongside cult furniture brands like Moroso, Arper or Matteo Grassi. Was Pure Village specially established to forge a link with the city? No, of course not. Pure Village is intended to establish lots of links, not just between the trade fair and city events. It’s meant to provide ideas and offer attractive packages so as to pick up on consumers’ need for a mingling of various product categories and interior spaces. Thanks to its small spaces and meshed structures, it’s an extremely versatile format. It allows exhibitors to show how different interior design products can grow together – take lighting or the merging of the bedroom and bathroom, for instance. It provides an opportunity to explore how home entertainment equipment can be integrated. In principle, what we’ve created is a kind of experimental ground for questions such as how a crossover between these products and brands should be portrayed in view of the fact that each and every one of the companies involved has its own very strong conception of design. That’s something that’s got to be learned. Where is this impetus coming from? The impetus is coming from the market. Obviously a lot of these product segments have their own distribution channels. But even so, more and more links are establishing themselves in the classic furnishing sector – and consequently in the retail sector too. Instead of using cardboard TVs or dummy lamps for their displays, furniture stores are beginning to integrate these products into their concepts. In future, a lot of furniture retailers will start thinking about how they can integrate other sales channels as independent partners in order to show how e.g. a bedroom can or should look if certain sanitaryware or taps are used. And it’s a highly attractive field for interior designers and architects, of course. Will this development have an impact on the trade fair too? In future, yes. That’s one of the many projects we’ll be tackling. We have to collaborate with the manufacturers to come up with a different kind of presentation. The way it is today, visitors make a beeline for their Photo: Koelnmesse; Andreas Körner (IMM10_TD0701_07) 80 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 suppliers and concentrate very much on the product. But I think it’s time to start providing content along with the product. We ought to ask ourselves what we want the product to express in relation to the interior as a whole. That would mean not showing Chair A in the 15 variations available any more, but showing what it looks like in context with textiles, lighting and home entertainment. That would give dealers and buyers an idea of how they can present the product at the POS, and the public would get an impression of what it might look like in their own homes. So you want to make the fair more attractive to consumers as well as trade visitors? We see ourselves as the most modern furniture store in the world, and that’s what we want to communicate. Our aim is to generate greater awareness of interior concepts, not just amongst visitors but amongst exhibitors as well. That will be new in 2010 too: if somebody brings an idea or a picture along to the Public Days, he can get advice from a team of interior designers and architects, for instance on what his room would look like with a certain piece of furniture he’s seen at the fair. Is it actually a trade fair’s job to comment on what the market has to offer? No, we definitely don’t want to pass comment, that’s not our job. What we want to do is collaborate with exhibitors to create interesting arrangements that will inspire retailers and consumers alike – and hopefully make the latter want to buy what they see. The longing for orientation has become more powerful than the desire for an all-encompassing display. That’s the feeling you get from listening to certain dealers: they just don’t want to see a series of huge stands all displaying the same kind of furniture any more. They’d rather have things a bit smaller and more compact, but enriched with ideas. We want the imm cologne to give retailers inspiration and ideas for adapting the products and presentation context to their own stores. But how can you exert any influence from your side? We can only motivate and send out our own signals. By offering exhibition concepts as we are in Pure Village, for instance. What we offer is this: we specify certain ideas that can either be implemented 1:1 or interpreted individually. We’re also thinking about offering a marketing consultation service: besides providing ideas for how to present the products at the fair, the concepts could also include supporting measures for the time before and after the show. But it will probably take quite some time to get it up and running. Firstly because exhibitors have to realise that it’s worth thinking about a new concept, and secondly because visitors have to get used to a new way of looking at things as well. In future, it will be vital to approach consumers more. Interview Udo Traeger I 81 So has the fair been doing its homework? It’s not just a case of looking to see what direction trade fairs will be going in; we have to have a very strong customer orientation as well. But the basic question is this: will we be able to turn our plans into practice and accomplish our mission to become the most modern furnishing fair in the world? Especially under such difficult and unpredictable market conditions and with no way of knowing whether things will get any better in 2010. What signals are you getting from manufacturers? The news tends to be quite vague. Some manufacturers seem to be doing quite well, but they aren’t necessarily the ones in the media spotlight. Others are still finding it a bit difficult to hold their ground, even though they’re top brands, because their export markets are drying up. Because of the economic situation right now, we really had to fight for every single exhibitor because many of them have sustained very heavy losses this year. It sounds as if you’ve been doing a lot of travelling. We were on the move a lot, knocking on doors and talking to people. We also developed a lot of concepts for getting major exhibitors from all over the world to come here. That revealed an interesting tendency, by the way: a lot of foreign exhibitors are very interested in the situation on the German market. And what conclusions are they coming to? As compared to other markets, Germany might not exactly be an Isle of the Blessed, but it’s relatively stable all the same. We were told that, especially in Spain and Italy, manufacturers have seen a lot of their markets collapse. Quite a few expressed an interest in the imm cologne again after many years of absence, because they want to renew their relationship network in Germany. They went to other hype markets like the Middle East, Russia and Asia because of the growth rates there and didn’t bother that much about the German market any more. They’re realising that now, of course. However, it’s not that easy for them to get into the German market because the German exhibitors have been doing their homework on their home market. But the imm cologne covers a series of other major European markets too, of course, so it’s an important and interesting place for discovering new markets. Are their sales suffering? In the past they always maintained a steady hum of activity in Germany and its neighbouring markets. Now there’s nothing – no agent, no representation, no dealer – and they’re wondering how to get into the market again. That brings us back to the business character of the fair. We didn’t just talk to exhibitors, we talked to dealers as well so we could identify ways of making their lives easier Photo: Koelnmesse; Andreas Körner (IMM10_TD0701_02) and strengthening the business character of the imm cologne even further. We’ll continue to expand our Business Centre service for dealers by providing free WLAN access and quiet areas where they can e.g. have a chat with their suppliers. And then of course there are the lounges for agents, dealers and vendors, as well as the VIP programme. What’s new about all that? We’ve really expanded our VIP programme and now have a database of more than 4,000 VIP customers from all over the world. But above all, we’ve been establishing contact with the agents because, as go-betweens, they play a very important role in forging links between manufacturers and dealers. We haven’t paid enough attention to them in the past. But that’s about to change. We’ll be offering the lounge again, and free admission to the fair for agents. On top of that, we’ll be going online with an internet-based agents network that will be continuously updated with agency data and sorted according to region and product, so that exhibitors looking for say, upholstered furniture in Great Britain are presented with several options, can choose the agent that’s right for them and invite him to their fair stand for talks. I can’t think of any other fair that offers this kind of matchmaking service. And we’ve got another first to celebrate: we in Cologne are the very first fair to have Lufthansa as our “official carrier”. The imm cologne’s excellent business character is undisputed. But what have you got to offer target groups like architects and interior designers? Hall 3.2 will be a highly attractive destination for 82 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 architects and interior designers as well – in combination with Hall 11, of course. Pure Village is a very special highlight, especially because of the trends it depicts. On top of that, it’s also where the Interior Trends 2010 will be staged by the Trendboard itself for the first time, with interpretations in various directions. How can the trends be portrayed in the lighting segment, for instance? Hall D³, which is totally booked out, is also a must. We’ve been able to attract even more highly interesting colleges to this year’s fair, and the young professionals will be gathering at the D³ forum again too. D³ is already highly regarded by the design community – but how does it go down with the trade fair audience? It seems as if D³ has become a kind of sourcing platform for manufacturers from the other halls, and it always gets a very good rating from architects in our surveys as well. We have a very special treat in store for them, by the way: we’re offering four or five guided tours of architectural highlights in and around Cologne. So we’ve got plenty to offer them. We also have a very high standard of service for journalists from all the different media, and we offer them plenty of digital material in the form of blogs and other online services too. There’s always a lot happening during the first few days of the imm cologne. Yes, there are always loads of people from television, radio and the mainstream press. The specialist press too, of course. Around 3,000 journalists from about 50 countries. The show offers exhibitors a highly attractive media landscape. And everyone pounces on the new products. How important are they for a good fair? If you’re asking me when people say it was a good fair, it’s the full order books that really count. But psychologically, it’s also important for people to go away feeling it was worth coming, and spread the word. The atmosphere also depends on whether there are plenty of people at the stands and whether the exhibitors are kept busy. That’s why we’re making the whole process even more compact by shortening the fair by a day. Even so, a trade fair is always a reflection of the economic situation, too. Some companies are still coming to Cologne despite their considerable difficulties because they see their presence at the fair as a chance to show the market: I’m still here! And I can still come up with something new. But having to keep presenting something new must put everybody under a great deal of pressure! There are definitely people who think we ought to create an opportunity to get out of the innovation hype so that they can concentrate on perfecting all the new things that are already out there. Maybe there’s a correlation with the homing trend, which also takes a longerterm approach. And then there’s the question of what’s sustainable as well as new? Sustainability could be an interesting aspect in this context. But who can afford not to present any new products in this day and age? That’s the point! I know several exhibitors who would love to show dealers one of last year’s new products that’s been perfected and refined over the last 12 months – i.e. a product which, in addition to the aesthetic aspect, represents a promise of quality for the consumer. But it isn’t just the dealers who are responsible for the hype; the media are behind a lot of it as well. So do you think the media’s way of looking at things is unfair? No, but it’s a bit contradictory. Every time they say there aren’t enough new products, but then they go and write pages and pages about new products anyway. In future, we want to make journalists more aware of all the new things out there right from the start. There’ll be a special exhibition of new products in Hall 10.2, a selection of all the new things being presented in Halls 11 to 8. Then maybe the occasional journalist will hit on the idea of widening his focus a little and take a look at the other product segments as well. Even something like a mattress can be presented in an extremely interesting way if you look into the properties of the materials, health aspects and so on. Photo: Koelnmesse; Andreas Körner (IMM10_TD0701_03) Interview Udo Traeger I 83 And now the mattress industry association has declared 2010 the Year of Good Sleep as well! Do you like reading in bed or do you have another favourite piece of furniture for getting stuck into a good book? I’m actually a pretty fanatical reader, so I like the reading furniture available from Moormann – some of it is really good fun, even if I haven’t got round to buying anything yet. Otherwise I tend to go for a hybrid style. We’ve got a mix of modern stuff and my wife’s heirlooms. What do you particularly like about Cologne? Despite all the public criticism, I think Cologne is a great city for culture. The Lit.Cologne is just one of the highlights. I’m also very interested in music. And I’ve noticed that a lot of the bands who play in Cologne really strike a chord with my daughters. Cologne is a city for youngsters. And although it might not be the richest city in Germany, its “Ring” is the longest furniture strip in Europe. That’s a manifestation of a very old tradition. And the Cologne furniture fair has played a major part in the development of that tradition. Further information: www.imm-cologne.com Photo: Koelnmesse; Andreas Körner (IMM10_TD0701_05) 84 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Cologne has what you would call an interesting face – not a homogeneous, beautiful facade like Paris, Milan or Berlin, but a profile with rough edges and flaws that holds a surprise or two in store. It is full of holes, patched both with post-war architecture of dubious charm and new, glittering fillings and solitary gems. In Cologne, Wilhelminian villas are juxtaposed with kiosks, modern glass palaces rub shoulders with filigree Gothic works. It’s in the side streets, in the little shops and restaurants that you’re more likely to stumble across design. The Colognian himself likes to do some expensive shopping before enjoying a bratwurst in one of the numerous breweries. This rather rustic way of life is the perfect counterpart to Cologne’s multifaceted, at times even gaudy art and design scene, which is alive and kicking in countless galleries and little boutiques, in topclass museums containing art that spans the centuries, in offbeat cafés and original shops. Photo: Florian Borkenhagen; Galerie gabrielle ammann (IMM10_TD0201_02) Even though the cathedral has been Cologne’s most impressive architectural showpiece for centuries, Germany’s biggest city on the Rhine has a host of other buildings that are well worth seeing. From the historic city centre all the way to the redeveloped Rheinau Harbour to the south, Cologne boasts architecture from vastly different epochs and in virtually any style you can think of – from the Romans to the Middle Ages, from the Renaissance and Historicism all the way to the present day. Especially in recent years, the appearance of the city and above all of the waterfront has changed – today Cologne presents a modern profile without having changed the medieval silhouette of its historic city centre. Old and new stand side by side. Even without the kind of gleaming test-tube district so popular in London or Hamburg, a wander along the banks of the river shows just how much modern architecture can enhance life in the city. Text and selection: Lars Mörs No responsibility is taken for the correctness of this information. Editor’s note: For more of Cologne’s sights and hot spots, see Content Folder 04_Cologne (www.imm-content-service.com) Honey, the cathedral is moving! (Galerie ammann) Art: Degreed interior architect Gabrielle Ammann has been working in the exciting field of fine arts for years now. In her gallery she focuses on the here and now, creating a fusion of contemporary and topical works from the fields of design, art and architecture – divisions she believes are in the process of disintegrating anyway. Until 26th February 2010, the Ammann Gallery in the Südstadt district of Cologne will be showing “TransSakrales”, an exhibition of objects that combine sacral elements with mobility. The work of Hamburg artist Florian Borkenhagen picks up on the tradition of Arte Povera by for instance turning a wheelbarrow into a sedan chair or placing a portable church in the preacher’s hand in an attempt to bring mobility to the supposed rigidity of the church. www.ammann-gallery.com Galerie gabrielle ammann Teutoburger Str. 27 50678 Cologne, Germany Tel: +49-(0)221-9328803 Cologne: Update I 85 Cologne: Update Out and about in Cologne Collection that exemplify the design developments triggered by the new material. From the sombre Bakelite of the early 20th century all the way to the brightly coloured, semi-transparent plastics of the present, the chronologically ordered selection depicts the technical, cultural, formal and aesthetic impact of plastic and complements the exhibits with several works of fine art in which plastic plays a key role. Photo: Rheinisches Bildarchiv Köln (RBA) 2008, Maria Luckey (IMM10_TD0201_01) Mondays at Papst’s (MAK) Culture: Colognians affectionately refer to it as the “MAK” – short for the “Museum für Angewandte Kunst”. Founded in 1888 as a museum of arts and crafts, the MAK today boasts one of Germany’s most important collections of European industrial design. Now housed in a 1950s museum building not far from the cathedral, the Museum of Applied Art presents collections of European applied art from the Middle Ages to the present day, as well as a design collection with exhibits dating from 1900 onwards that covers 20th century design classics from Bauhaus to the functionalism of the Braun appliances all the way to Memphis. The new design department that was added in late 2008 represents the MAK’s contribution to the current debate: the new permanent exhibition, Art and Design in Dialogue, was compiled from the Winkler Collection and, rather than presenting design as an isolated discipline, establishes close links and cultural, historic relationships with works from the world of fine arts. Art-ificial: The current special exhibition “Plastic: Revolution for Design + Art” has been extended until 24th January 2010 – the same day the imm cologne finishes – and shows exhibits from the rich stocks of the Winkler Optimism by design: This year too, the MAK will be showing a special exhibition dedicated to furniture design to coincide with the Cologne Design Week. From the first day of the imm cologne, i.e. January 19th, until March 21st 2010, the museum aims to introduce visitors to a hitherto little-known chapter of post-war German design history. “Mondays at Papst’s” presents the multifaceted world of designer and futurologist Walter Papst, who died in Cologne in 2008 and whose works translated the principles of modernism into the spirit of optimism that dominated the 1950s and 1960s. His work blends new materials, new ergonomic insights and new ideals into designs that are as upbeat as they are pioneering. The MAK is the third stop on the exhibition’s tour. The exhibits were compiled by Wilkhahn from the extensive estate of the Kiel-born designer, who ran a studio for industrial design and product development in Cologne from 1957 to 1974. As well as various prototypes and originals, the exhibition also includes the new edition of the “Three-legged Chair”, Papst’s iconic 1954 attempt to set the world of school furniture in motion. His passion for the Cologne carnival was less widely known. Papst saw the event as an artistic happening and liked to celebrate Carnival Monday with guests from the art and design scene. The exhibition takes visitors on a fascinating and inspiring journey through time and covers everything from Papst’s product designs to his legendary Carnival Monday parties. www.museenkoeln.de/museum-fuer-angewandte-kunst Museum für Angewandte Kunst An der Rechtschule, 50667 Cologne Tel: +49-(0)221-221-26735 Opening times: Tues.–Sun., 11 a.m.–5 p.m. During Cologne Design Week (19–22.01.2010), the “Mondays at Papst’s” exhibition is open from 11 a.m. until 8 p.m. and admission is free. 86 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Photo: Koelnmesse; FAR (IMM10_TD0201_03) Photo: Koelnmesse; FAR (IMM10_TD0201_06) Bar none! (Die kunstbar) Dialogue on the Rhine (KAP Forum) Design: There’s no shortage of bars, pubs and restaurants in Cologne. And every establishment needs refurbishing now and again. But the fact that the kunstbar gets a new look every year is due not to its unruly clientele but to its unusual concept. In close collaboration with the Kölnischer Kunstverein, the bar in the immediate vicinity of the Alter Wartesaal issues an annual invitation to an appointed artist to redesign the interior. The artist is essentially given a free hand and can also have a say in the lighting, sound and objects for his artistic design, as well as incorporating paintings, photos or video installations. Right now, visitors to the kunstbar encounter Ingo Stein’s neoncoloured installation “Another Girl’s Paradise”. This synthesis of the arts also encompasses the beverage menu, to which the respective artist is allowed to add his favourite drinks. The aim is to extend the basic collection of liquid sustenance compiled by the owners – mostly cocktails – until it eventually represents a huge almanac of kunstbar drinking culture. http://diekunstbar.com Rendezvous: Buildings styled on historic cargo cranes, a view of the Rhine, a promenade along the water’s edge, offices, galleries, cafés, restaurants. The newly developed Rheinau harbour is Cologne’s latest prestige project. And right in the middle of it is the KAP Forum. Nine firms with a design and architecture focus (Alape, BASF, Carpet Concept, Dornbracht, Gira, Kvadrat, Silent Gliss, Wilkhahn and Zumtobel Licht) have joined forces to create a platform for presenting new ideas in architecture, technology and design and instigating a dialogue. With its consulting centre for architects, planners, designers, investors and project developers, the network aims to cater to the needs of the knowledge society, but also to offer an exhibition and event space so as to involve the public. In a short space of time, KAP Forum has become a driving force in the Cologne urban development debate – a discourse in which international architects and firms are also participating. In addition to the already traditional exhibition during Cologne Design Week – this time with an installation by Wilkhahn – KAP Forum will also be presenting an installation at Pure Village, the imm cologne’s new exhibition format in Hall 3.2. www.kap-forum.de die kunstbar Chargesheimerplatz 1 50667 Cologne, Germany Tel: +49-(0)172-5279845 Opening times: 7 p.m.–03. a.m. daily KAP Forum Agrippinawerft 28 50678 Cologne, Germany Tel: +49-(0)221-992029-0 Cologne: Update I 87 Photo: zeitgeist cologne (IMM10_TD0201_05) Photo: Dirk Skreber; Fotostudio Schaub (IMM10_TD0201_04) Far from the mainstream (Zeitgeist) Fringe art (Skulpturenpark) Shopping: It hasn’t been there long, the Cologne design shop in Friesenstrasse with the assortment that defies definition. “Zeitgeist” opened its doors in September 2009 and has been inviting design-oriented trendsetters to step in and discover its wares ever since. It stocks everything from cosmetics and jewellery to books, music, electronics and drinks – all in limited editions, naturally. For anybody that’s always been looking for a set of gold headphones or raves about wellness water from Bangladesh, it’s the perfect address. Many designers have already decided to market their products exclusively via the Cologne design store. Owner Franck Brunaut believes Zeitgeist’s appeal lies in the chance of finding something special – and owning it too, of course. He’s always on the lookout for new, innovative things and ideas. www.zeitgeist-cologne.com Insiders’ tip: Right next to Cologne Zoo, on the edge of the Nordstadt district, old trees and modern outdoor sculptures share an area of approx. 25,000 m2 – big enough to drown out the noise of the traffic and the city. Here, in contrast to many other sculpture parks, art and nature lovers will only find contemporary works of art, some of which are replaced with new pieces every two years. The current exhibition, “KölnSkulptur 5 – Reality Check”, aims to make the visitor question his own perception of what’s real and what isn’t. It picks up on topical social issues with a sometimes humorous, sometimes critical slant and poses the question of how sustainable reality is. The new perspectives thus gained can be discussed during a visit to the park restaurant. An initiative launched by collectors Michael and Eleonore Stoffels led to the creation of the sculpture park on an unused green space between Riehler Strasse, Zoobrücke and the Rhine in 1997. It soon became a popular destination for day-trippers wanting to combine a stroll in the fresh air with a little artistic input. During the imm cologne, visitors to the fair can enjoy the park free of charge during daylight hours. www.skulpturenparkkoeln.de zeitgeist cologne Friesenwall 28-30 50672 Cologne, Germany Opening times: Mon.–Fri., 11 a.m–8 p.m. Opening times: daily April – Sept. 10.30 a.m.–7 p.m. Oct. – March 10.30 a.m.–5 p.m. Free admission 88 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Photo: Koelnmesse; Pure Village (detail) (IMM10_TD1401_04) Photo: Koelnmesse; Pure Village (IMM10_TD1401_03) Pure Village; Interview Dick Spierenburg I 89 Interview Dick Spierenburg Pure Village: A market square for the fair Photo: Dick Spierenburg; Koelnmesse (IMM10_TD1401_01) Pure Village clusters renowned design brands and creative furnishing ideas at the heart of the imm cologne. In our interview Dick Spierenburg, responsible for the design of Pure Village, explains what makes this innovative trade fair format so different. Dick Spierenburg is one of those designers with a wideranging sphere of activity who knows how to respond to media and consumer interests alike. Right now he’s busy planning his own house, a project that allows him to implement his ideals without compromises – a merging of design, interior and architecture. The co-founder and project leader of the Cologne Design Post developed the architecture of the new Pure Village trade fair project for Koelnmesse. Spierenburg hopes his exhibition concept will underline the imm cologne’s development from furniture show to interior design fair. Dick Spierenburg studied architecture at the Technical University of Delft and has been working as a designer since the late 1970s. As co-founder of the Nederlands Interieur Collectief, he promotes collaboration between Dutch design manufacturers and importers. After working for architecture and urban development firm Bo.2, he ran his own design studio with Karel Boonzaaijer from 2001 to 2008. He designs furniture for private interiors and offices for clients like Artifort, Arco or Moroso. Koelnmesse asked you to design the new “Pure Village” exhibition format for the international furniture fair imm cologne 2010. What’s behind the concept? The idea is to create an alternative layout plan and hall architecture that facilitates innovative presentations and guarantees a surprising experience for visitors. Halls normally have a rectangular layout plan. Every exhibitor has his own space and has his own stand built. Pure Village is totally different. Instead of running parallel to one another, the paths lead to a centre – a central square where there’s lots going on. In Pure Village, all the spaces are planned cohesively. They’re all similar, but not the same. The heights, materials and colours vary. These completely designed spaces give the exhibitor the option to focus all his efforts on a 90 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Photo: Dick Spierenburg; Koelnmesse (IMM10_TD1401_02) first-rate presentation. At the same time, there are plenty of possibilities for personalising the space too. This part of the imm cologne is a gathering point for both smaller, young design brands and major brands who want their presence at the fair to take the form of a compact, specific presentation. The imm cologne is creating an exciting overall picture that makes it relatively easy for exhibitors to stage an optimal presentation. In Pure Village, the focus is on the presentation of understated product exhibitions, fascinating interior concepts or settings that lend themselves to informal meetings with business partners. There’ll be a lot happening in the square at the centre of Pure Village. It’s a permanent meeting point for exhibitors and visitors. There’s a bar and lounge right next to it, as well as a forum where presentations, lectures and other events will be taking place. The exhibition architecture is based on a flexible system of modules. How does this system work and what possibilities do exhibitors have when it comes to the design of the modules? In principle, the spaces are totally open. The idea is Photo: Koelnmesse; Pure Village (IMM10_TD1401_05) that they’re only closed when the presentation requires it. The partitions and columns are available either with painted wooden panels or a semi-open structure made of woven strips. There’s a choice of several colours for all the materials, but only ever neutral shades. This leads to subtle variations, but the focus stays firmly on what’s happening inside the cubes. To what extent does the Pure Village concept do justice to current developments in design – the merging of various areas of the home, for instance? By cross-linking product ranges and focussing on interior concepts, Pure Village provides an ideal setting for showing hybrid interior designs. That’s why we’ve also tried to bring manufacturers together to implement new concepts – a bathroom manufacturer who collaborates with a furniture manufacturer to create a space for sleeping and bathing, for instance. The same thing is feasible for the dining room and kitchen or indoor and outdoor products. Rooms that are suitable for both relaxing and working are another interesting idea. Pure Village; Interview Dick Spierenburg I 91 Photo: Koelnmesse; Pure Village (IMM10_TD1401_06) Who or what sectors is the new format aimed at, and where will the presentation be located within the imm cologne? Pure Village will be set up in Hall 3.2, over the D³ level and opposite Hall 11, where the big-name design brands will be. So there’ll be three exhibition areas that are very closely connected. The exhibition architecture is based on a flexible system of modules. How does this system work and what possibilities do exhibitors have when it comes to the design of the modules? The architecture is based on a structure with columns positioned on a 4-metre module. That produces spaces with an area of 16 m2 or multiples of that. The headroom between the columns is always 3 metres and the total height is 3.50, 4.25 or 5 metres. And why is Pure Village called Pure Village? It’s called Pure Village because this part of the fair is the “pure part” – very understated and excellently designed. And it’s a village because it’s got such a different layout, such a different structure. Further information: www.purevillage.net 92 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Photo: Koelnmesse; Installation of Pure Village Hall 3.2 (IMM10_TD_1501_01) Trends and Innovations I 93 Trends and Innovations: Successful mix at the imm cologne 2010 The imm cologne 2010 presents trends and innovations, reinvents itself and trusts in proven concepts. 94 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Photo: Koelnmesse; D3 Contest imm cologne 2009; Lutz Sternstein (IMM10_TD1501_05) When it comes to change, people often have mixed feelings. They are reluctant to give up their habits, be it their field of work, their favourite place on the couch or their annual holiday in Italy. The loss seems to weigh more heavily than the prospect of the potential gain. Take the introduction of longer opening times for German shops: despite all the prophecies of doom at the time, nobody would willingly surrender the new-found convenience any more. But when it comes to technical innovations, interior trends and fashion, things can’t change fast enough for most people. We have come to regard the newest products as the most desirable – a perception of value that is rooted in our belief in progress. Innovations in these areas enrich our lives; they provide scope for acting out our individuality and setting ourselves apart from others. From fashion to furnishings, the consumer follows the latest trend developments – sometimes enthusiastically, sometimes contemplating them with a critical eye. There is plenty of scope for innovation in interior design: from the colours and fabrics all the way to the materials, forms and functions. At trade fairs, new products are the icing on the cake – and at the imm cologne 2010, that icing has again been applied with a generous hand. The big show that heralds the start of the new furniture season has several innovative mixtures to offer its visitors. New product ideas are presented in a particularly fresh and unconventional way at the newcomer forum D3 Design talents. The interior world showcased in the Smart segment sets its sights on young consumers, whilst the imm cologne Trendboard has its eye on the entire spectrum of interior trends. The imm cologne itself has also undergone several changes. There’s more to see than ever before, but less time to see it in because this year’s fair is one day shorter than usual – which makes it all the more exciting. In Hall 10 there will be an Innovation Catwalk that clusters the most important innovations from the fair in a clearly structured presentation. But more than anything else, the imm cologne is doing away with boundaries – boundaries between product categories like lighting, carpets, textiles, accessories and bathrooms, but also between various areas of the home. Living and cooking, indoor and outdoor, bedroom and bathroom – the transitions are becoming increasingly fluid. Pure Village, the imm cologne’s new exhibition format, aims to reflect this development with new structures and presentation approaches. D³ – the presentation forum for bright young things It’s often the young and particularly creative designers who haven’t been influenced by the market yet who provide the scene with innovations. In order to encourage this creative potential, the imm cologne 2010 will be presenting the fifth D³ Design talents show – the Cologne furnishing fair’s event for up-and-coming designers. Divided into the three categories D³ Professionals, D³ Contest and D³ Schools, the D³ shows will again be providing new impetus for the future of interior design. The presentation of these inspiring and visionary designs will be accompanied by various supporting events and installations. In the D³ Professionals category, independent designers and design studios can present their ideas to a broad audience and make contact with manufacturers and dealers. D³ Schools provides colleges from the fields of product design, interior architecture and architecture with Trends and Innovations I 95 Photo: Koelnmesse; imm cologne 2009; Interior Innovation Award (IMM10_TD1501_02) a dedicated forum for presenting their course content and outstanding student projects. An independent jury awards prizes for the best exhibition concepts. The D3 Contest gives students and graduates from the above disciplines another opportunity to win awards: there are prizes for the three best interior products from categories such as furniture, lighting, textiles, carpets or wallpapers. The D³ Contest in particular has developed into an effective contact forum for young designers in recent years, establishing itself as a popular sourcing destination for the industry. Interior Innovation Award – the furniture fair prize Another permanent feature on the imm cologne’s agenda is the presentation of the interior innovation award, which is one of the most highly regarded design awards in the furnishing sector and is presented by a jury of internationally acclaimed designers. And the award is not restricted to the trade fair’s exhibitors: those of its partners like Design Post, Spichern Höfe and KAP Forum can enter their product highlights as well. The award is presented for outstanding innovative accomplishments in the furnishing sector. As well as design and technology, that also includes new materials and details as well as outstanding product concepts and market triumphs. For the first time, the imm cologne 2010 will be presenting all the products nominated for an award in a special show. The prizes will be presented during the Cologne Design Night in the Alter Wartesaal, the former waiting room of the main station, starting at 7 p.m. on Monday, 18th January 2010. Smart – interior worlds for youngsters Seeing as young designers have been given a special place at the fair, it would be a shame to neglect the field of young interiors. It is an area where new trends are often born and gives new room concepts the chance to prove their viability for day-to-day life. Young people are particularly likely to live alone and only have a limited amount of space available to them. Flexible and space-saving solutions should convey a roomy atmosphere even when space is in short supply, clever furnishings should offer maximum storage space and multiple functions. At the same time, a trendy design is indispensable, especially for this target group. When it comes to lifestyle furniture, the popularity of purist design is still growing strongly. But that’s not to say there aren’t occasional retro echoes that luxuriate in lavish colours and forms. Even if, these days, integrated entertainment electronics like iPod docking stations are a must. The Trendboard – the imm cologne’s trend analysts What have Discipline and Comfort Zone got in common? Both are amongst the Interior Trends being presented by the imm cologne 2010. It is thanks to the continuous efforts of Koelnmesse that a professional discourse about design as a market factor is possible in such a fast-moving arena as a trade fair. The Cologne Trendboard – an international panel of architects, design and interior design experts that analyses the interior trends of the coming season – is a good example of the competence clustered in the cathedral city. The Trend Book it compiles translates the most important trends for the furnishing sector into words and images. Materials, surfaces and structures – integral aspects of furniture and interior design – are given the same weight as the concrete forms developed by the designers. The book – which is rapidly becoming compulsory reading for the 96 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 Photo: Koelnmesse; Press breakfast on the Trend Book 2009 (IMM10_TD1501_03) Photo: Koelnmesse; imm cologne 2009; Artanova Horst AG; Athena (IMM10_TD1501_04) Trends and Innovations I 97 entire sector – is a vivid depiction of the alliance between new forms, the latest materials and the ambience of the moment. Pure Village – the innovation of the fair But even though its ultimate goal is to present new products, the imm cologne itself comes up with its fair share of innovations too. For at the end of the day, the exhibition itself has to adapt to trends and tendencies as well. Even the way we live is changing. The transitions between the kitchen and living room or bathroom and bedroom are becoming more fluid. Factors such as lighting, textiles and accessories are becoming increasingly important in today’s new interior worlds. The imm cologne is responding to these changes with its new “Pure Village” presentation format. The innovative use of space in Pure Village, characterised by open structures and interesting juxtapositions, allows interior worlds to merge with one another and opens up new perspectives. The exhibition architecture is an expression of the same principles: rather than running parallel to one another, the pathways lead to a central point which – like a market square – tempts visitors to linger and enjoy a communicative exchange in the lounge and bar. A new concept that is ideally suited to clustering forward-looking ideas and product solutions from all furnishing-related areas. Gerhard Böse, CEO of Koelnmesse, has very clear expectations: “What we are launching under the name ‘Pure Village’ is a totally new trade fair format. The atmosphere created in Hall 3.2 is intended to hold particular appeal for the design-oriented brands.” Editor’s note: One of the special services the imm cologne offers the international press is the “hit guide”, which will again be available in 2010. It comes in a handy A5 size and provides an overview of the highlights from the fair in the form of colour pictures and brief product descriptions. The selection is based on the new products announced by exhibitors in the run-up to the fair. A print version of the “hit guide” will be available to journalists as of 21st December 2009. Further information: www.imm-cologne.com 98 I The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle: 10_Trends and Design 2010 08_en Trend Book – Interior Trends 2010 (DVD) www.imm-content-service.com Trend Book Contents 3 Editorial In search of intelligent solutions 46 The Trendboard A good mix: the Trendboard panel at a glance 4 Press Release The imm cologne Trend Book 2010 Post-Big Bang Aesthetics 52 Making-of Documenting future realities 8 12 16 20 Interior Trends 2010 Trickery Comfort Zone Rehab Discipline 24 The Trend Book - A Reference Work for the Future 26 Compact: The imm cologne Trend Book 2010 – All the basic information and the 4 trends at a glance Trendboard Workshop 30 Drawing Lines into the Future 36 Statement Marcus Fairs: Cool minimalism versus design for comfort 38 Interview Trendboard member Johanna Grawunder on American refrigerators and the responsibility of design in times of crisis 56 Pure Village Inspiration between sofas and bathtubs 60 The Fair imm cologne set to become the most modern furnishing fair in Europe 64 Imprint/Credits Content-Service imm cologne 2010 I 99 Der Content-Service der imm cologne zu Design und Wohnkultur The imm cologne's content service for design and interior lifestyle 09_en Business by Design (DVD) www.imm-content-service.com Contents 2 Editorial Big Business Number Games 4 Self-fulfilment through creative living 6 Filling a tall order 8 Buying furniture: the new man’s thing 10 Interview Designer Stefan Diez on the risks of being average and the unprofitability of ever-shorter development cycles 24 Making-of CH04 Houdini (e15): A chair with no snags 28 Market Facts and figures on the situation of the German furniture industry: Home styling is in – buying furniture too? 32 Company Walter Knoll: Seeking out gaps with designers 36 Interview Oliver Kleine on the LEONARDO brand’s commitment to interior design 40 Interview Dirk-Uwe Klaas, Association of the German Furniture Industry, on consumers’ changing mentality 46 Interview Leo Lübke, interlübke/COR, on why it pays to commit to quality and design 54 Market Green Design: Riding the green wave to sales growth 60 Interview Giovanni Gervasoni on his successful recipe for the German market 66 Pure Village (II) Pure Village clusters famous design brands and creative furnishing ideas in the heart of the imm cologne 70 The Fair imm cologne is Germany’s top international furniture platform 74 Online Content Service A note on our own behalf 76 Imprint/Credits Imprint/Credits I 100 Der Content-Service der imm cologne zu Design und Wohnkultur The imm cologne‘s content service for design and interior lifestyle Imprint/Credits imm cologne 2010 19.-24.01.2010 Idea: Markus Majerus www.imm-cologne.com Concept: FAR_consulting Communication, design management, trend research Frank A. Reinhardt Dillenburger Str. 83 51105 Cologne, Germany Tel.: + 49-2 21-620 18 02 Fax: + 49-2 21-962 45 39 [email protected] www.far-consulting.de Your contact for enquiries: Markus Majerus Tel.: + 49 221 821-2627 Fax: + 49 221 821-3417 E-Mail [email protected] Koelnmesse GmbH Messeplatz 1 50679 Cologne Postfach 21 07 60 50532 Cologne Germany Tel.: +49 221 821-0 Fax: +49 221 821-2574 [email protected] www.koelnmesse.de Management: Gerald Böse (Chief Executive Officer) Herbert Marner Oliver P. Kuhrt Dr. Gerd Weber Chairman of the Supervisory Board: Jürgen Roters, Lord Mayor of the City of Cologne Place of business and (legal) domicile: Cologne - Amtsgericht Köln, HRB 952 Editorial team: Frank A. Reinhardt Editorial assistant: Lars Mörs Translation: Alison Du Bovis, Jork Layout: Karsten Jipp, Berlin Photos: Karsten Jipp, Berlin Signed articles represent the opinion of the author, not necessarily that of the editorial team. All contributions are protected by copyright and are for press use only. Journalists can use all articles and photos free of charge on condition that they provide two specimen copies of the corresponding publication. It is not obligatory to name the authors. Image copyrights are held by the originators and by Koelnmesse as tagged. We thank the photographers and manufacturers for kindly providing the pictures and request that they be credited accordingly. The place of performance and jurisdiction is Cologne.