Antonio Scaffidi
furniture designer
Antonio Scaffidi is an experienced furniture designer and one of the founding members of Danish Design Makers.
A bio-based design
Antonio is comfortable with his brief. Maybe a little too comfortable, since he has decided to break with some of the requirements. He feels like challenging the company a little and inspire them with his material choices.
“They want a wooden product, an integrated design, and very high ergonomics. But that is somewhat ambiguous to me since wood needs a lot of processing to obtain high ergonomics and that requires a lot of energy and glue. From my perspective, that doesn’t go hand in hand with the reduction theme.”
Thus, Antonio is working with another bio-based material, which he has experimented with in the past. He hopes to obtain flexibility in this material and thus make the design more lively than it would have been if it was only made of wood. Though he cannot simulate this factor beforehand.
I find it exciting to work with new, innovative materials. But it is also a bit unnerving, because I don’t know the durability of this product before I actually make the prototype.”
Antonio thinks of an integrated design as being a design where the elements fit well together and meet each other in an elegant way. He wants to show this off in his design by assembling all parts with screws in a visible manner.
“I want my product to be easily taken apart, so I am designing for disassembly. This is to prolong the product lifetime as each part can be disassembled for repairing or replacement. Normally, the places where materials meet in a product are hidden away, but I want to show how easy it is to disassemble my design. I think it is a very honest way to handle this design expression.”
New materials are often unfit to be tested by current industry standards
“I don’t think my design will live up to the conventional test requirements for the contract market”
Antonio stresses that it requires a willingness from the industry to embrace the new alternatives to fossil materials. A transition to more bio-based materials also requires the safety tests, durability tests, and hygiene tests to evolve, because new materials do not necessarily fit into existing standards.
If we want to change the industry for the better, we need to reevaluate our current way of doing things and I believe this involves reassessing the conventional test and certifying requirements. I think this project set-up is a fine opportunity for Danish Design Makers to have such discussions with the industry”.
It is indeed a shame if too many innovative projects using new materials stop because traditional test requirements are outdated. But we also need to think about what will and can happen to these new materials that are invented. Can they be recycled? Can they be composted? Or will they just end up as unusable trash because we lack processing systems for them?
Participants are unbiased
Antonio finds the blind date experiment interesting because both designers and companies are unbiased. The designers only need to deal with their task at hand and accept that they must wait for the companies’ reactions and feedback. The companies also take a chance not knowing the designers and their work in advance.
“I am very curious to learn what happens when we meet the companies at the fair. Everyone should be. I don’t think anyone has tried this set-up before.”
This designer is optimistic about the reveal and looks forward to this important meeting with the industry.
Stay tuned..
When the design has been revealed at ORGATEC on October 22nd, this article will be updated with photos of the final design and more insights from the designer. The climate emission number will also be shared here along with an explanation of how the design choices have influenced the emissions.
Context
Målbar participates in Danish Design Makers’ 2024 design challenge, The Blind Date experiment where 19 designers and design duos answer furniture briefs from anonymous European furniture companies. The designers use Målbar’s climate screening tool to gain insigths into the climate emissions of materials and production processes, learning about the climate impact of their design choices. Ultimately, the total climate footprint of each design will be calculated and presented at ORGATEC in Cologne on October 22nd-25th 2024.
This article reflects the designer’s own opinion and Målbar does not necessarily agree with their statements about materials, processes, etc.