Co Table

Co Table

Designer Norm Architects

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Co Table

Co Table

Designer Norm Architects

With its simple and elegant design, the rectangular Co Table seamlessly complements the Co-Chair collection, creating a cohesive look in professional settings. Offering long-lasting performance, style and functionality in two sizes and material color options that accommodate different spatial requirements, tastes and purposes in a range of modern workspaces, its distinctive design details include decorative screws on the desk apron, solid oak trim and chromed legs.

Size

Selected: 55 x 27.5 in

Color

Selected: Black Steel | Terra Laminate

Regular price $1,910.00
Regular price Sale price $1,910.00
Sale Sold out
Ready to ship on: July 18 2024

Materials

Steel, Laminate, Chipboard, Solid Oak

Dimensions

55 x 27.5 in: H: 29 in, W: 27.5 in, D: 55 in.
94.4 x 39.3 in: H: 29 in, W: 39.3 in, D: 94.4 in.
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Norm Architects

Founded in Copenhagen in 2008 by Jonas Bjerre-Poulsen and Kasper Rønn, Norm Architects specialise in residential architecture, commercial interiors, industrial design, photography and art direction. The name, Norm Architects, reflects the group’s emphasis on the importance of drawing inspiration from norms and traditions within architecture and design – particularly the Scandinavian design principles of timeless aesthetics and natural materials, and the modernist values of restraint and refinement. Guided by these principles, Norm Architects produce a design that unites materials and craftsmanship, while embodying beauty, history and, most importantly, timeless simplicity, where there is nothing more to add or take away. Today, the group regularly collaborates with Audo Copenhagen, helping to drive the evolution of the brand and its product offerings —imbued with the same intrinsic quality as Norms creative direction: a simplicity that carries bigger ideas. Lead by the body and mind rather than by trends or technology, their projects explore ideas that not only look good but that also feel good: architecture becomes thoughtful, minimalism acquires softness and visual matter assumes haptic qualities.