Molteni & C
505 – 2011 edition Wall rack

Molteni & C
|
![]() |
Diseño: Nicola Gallizia
Presented: Salone del Mobile 2012, Milán
ID de Stylepark: 05.1099.00206
categories: |
Design
›
muebles para el hogar
›
estantes / armarios
›
estantes individuales
|
01 descripción del producto
descripción de productos
Through a radical redesign process, 505 2011 edition by Nicola Gallizia, provides an authoritative response to the new demands of the home following two primary guidelines: on one hand, greater function due to the introduction of specific elements such as new multimedia compartments equipped, upon request, with audio/ video signal receivers, wired desks, vertical sliding doors or flap doors. On the other, wider use of the system from a compositional and aesthetic perspective, with smaller and more functional elements such as cupboards, hanging modules or new types of partitions used on the same structure enlivening furnishings based on the concept of compositional asymmetry. Asymmetry is created not only by playing with the horizontal and vertical, but also with various shelves using components of different depths and thicknesses such as the new 44 mm door in a wood or lacquered finish or traditional 22 mm doors in 5mm glass. New woods are available such as elm, in two colour shades, and various bright new lacquered colours.
02 All 505 Products
03 Tags
Company History, German Design, Molteni & C Articles, Molteni & C Products, Nicola Gallizia Products04 Articles about Molteni & C
Near-perfect living
What attitude do the Germans have toward their homes? This is an interesting question, which sociologist Alphons Silbermann pursued in his 1989 study “Neues vom Wohnen der Deutschen”. It is now to be updated with “Deutschland privat”, which has shown many German homes to be in almost perfect condition. Leo Lübke, the commissioner of the study, is delighted at the Germans’ affirmation of furniture as a cultural asset.
› To the articleMy house has four corners
You can kill a person with an apartment, just as if it were an axe, claims German graphic designer Heinrich Zille. So how will the inhabitants of a house in Portugal fare who live in an edifice without windows, almost as if in a cave?
› To the articleGlass protection
In Vilnius a collector of antique books built his family home round the historical walls of a cannon foundry.
› To the article





