| overall dimension | |
|---|---|
width |
1510 mm, 2880 mm |
height |
300 mm, 850 mm |
Depth |
1080 mm, 2000 mm |

B&B Italia
|
![]() |
Design: Zaha Hadid
Presented: Salone del Mobile 2007, Milan
stylepark-id: 05.1200.10158
categories: |
Design
›
home furniture
›
seating furniture
›
sofas
|
01 product description
Product description
A continuous shape, a blend of aesthetics and ergonomics: Moon System expresses the perfect combination of B&B Italia's tendency towards experimentation and the ongoing research into the complexity of curved geometry of world-famous architect Zaha Hadid. The traditional idea of seating is radically re-examined to create a new, strongly dynamic angular shape: a "single block" sofa that looks like the back, seat and armrests were "carved" out of a single material. With a metallic sheen like an object from outer space, Moon System is at its theatrical best when positioned in the middle of a room. Its flowing curves appear to change from different points of observation. A matching pouf the shape of the indentation on the front of the sofa completes the scene, following and filling in the general design of the piece.
02 dimensions/weight
| Seat dimensions | |
|---|---|
Height of seat |
300 mm, 335 mm |
03 Tags
B&B Italia Articles, B&B Italia Products, Chairs, Exhibitions, imm cologne 2012, Zaha Hadid Articles, Zaha Hadid Products04 Articles about B&B Italia and Zaha Hadid
The Bilbao defect
Even those members of the general public who only rarely go to exhibitions or attend concerts know the cultural temples erected by the likes of Frank Gehry and Zaha Hadid – from the TV or magazines. Spectacular museums and concert halls have long since become a city marketing tool. An exhibition in Berlin takes a closer look.
Twelve dreams under the big blue sky
Lounging and dreaming in the big outdoors, preferably on huge sofas and comfy daybeds, into which we lightly sink and forget the everyday rat race.
› To the article18 million coins for the Underground
In 2012, Edward Barber uand Jay Osgerby caused quite a stir with their design for the Olympic torch. This year the two architects are placing a renewed emphasis on furniture design. Uta Abendroth met with one half of the duo, Jay Osgerby, in Milan, where their sofas, tables and stool premiered at Knoll.
› To the article





