Ever since the firm was founded in 1974, cepezed has chosen to 'furniturise' architecture. A typical cepezed principle, which therefore proves as relevant as ever after 50 years. It saves space, saves material and offers flexibility, allowing a building to last longer. But what exactly does furnitecture mean and why was this choice made at the time?
benefit and necessity
The term 'furnitecture' has everything to do with cepezed's choice of kit of parts architecture. cepezed's buildings are constructed from parts which can be prefabricated. Thus, the quality of the prefab components, and therefore the building, is determined in the factory. On the construction site, almost only assembly takes place. As such, the entire building effectively becomes a product, or 'furniture'. Jan Pesman, one of the firm's three founders in 1974, calls himself "an industrial designer turned architect".
Pesman came upon furniture by his pursuit of quality: industrially manufactured elements generally have a higher quality than what is made on site. 'It was a question of benefit and necessity,' says Pesman, 'just like in nature, where evolution is also driven by functional necessity'.
cepezed is more interested in functional arguments than playful inspirations. If a cepezed building is slanting or crooked, has a cantilever or striking shape, then this is necessary: cepezed makes architecture that 'makes sense' in all respects, buildings where place, programme, spatial design, budget, material et cetera are in harmony. Pesman: 'Buildings then acquire a natural naturalness that makes you want to stay there.'
joe colombo
In a kit or parts, designs have to be true to the millimetre, otherwise they won't fit together. This demands great precision from designers. It also means that interior design is not laid over it like a 'layer' after the first layer has been built, but that the interior is integrated into the architecture. Not surprisingly, industrial designer Joe Colombo is one of Pesman's examples.
Like no other, Colombo understood the art of integrating functions into a volume. This could be an out-of-place kitchen unit, such as the Total Furniture Unit, but also a Boby, Colombo's famous storage cabinet on wheels. The designers at cepezed love the aesthetics this produces, but find Colombo's approach of designing 'intelligent cubic metres' that can be produced in a factory. equally important.
The design for the Rietveld-Schröder House by architect (and furniture maker) Gerrit Rietveld is another example Jan Pesman likes to cite. Rietveld's interest in the industrial manufacture of buildings and products reinforces his view that you should see buildings as building products. 'Think of the zigzag chair made from a cabinet shelf, the armchair made of bent plywood or the chair pressed out of a plate.'
benefit and necessity
The term 'furnitecture' has everything to do with cepezed's choice of kit of parts architecture. cepezed's buildings are constructed from parts which can be prefabricated. Thus, the quality of the prefab components, and therefore the building, is determined in the factory. On the construction site, almost only assembly takes place. As such, the entire building effectively becomes a product, or 'furniture'. Jan Pesman, one of the firm's three founders in 1974, calls himself "an industrial designer turned architect".
Pesman came upon furniture by his pursuit of quality: industrially manufactured elements generally have a higher quality than what is made on site. 'It was a question of benefit and necessity,' says Pesman, 'just like in nature, where evolution is also driven by functional necessity'.
cepezed is more interested in functional arguments than playful inspirations. If a cepezed building is slanting or crooked, has a cantilever or striking shape, then this is necessary: cepezed makes architecture that 'makes sense' in all respects, buildings where place, programme, spatial design, budget, material et cetera are in harmony. Pesman: 'Buildings then acquire a natural naturalness that makes you want to stay there.'
joe colombo
In a kit or parts, designs have to be true to the millimetre, otherwise they won't fit together. This demands great precision from designers. It also means that interior design is not laid over it like a 'layer' after the first layer has been built, but that the interior is integrated into the architecture. Not surprisingly, industrial designer Joe Colombo is one of Pesman's examples.
Like no other, Colombo understood the art of integrating functions into a volume. This could be an out-of-place kitchen unit, such as the Total Furniture Unit, but also a Boby, Colombo's famous storage cabinet on wheels. The designers at cepezed love the aesthetics this produces, but find Colombo's approach of designing 'intelligent cubic metres' that can be produced in a factory. equally important.
The design for the Rietveld-Schröder House by architect (and furniture maker) Gerrit Rietveld is another example Jan Pesman likes to cite. Rietveld's interest in the industrial manufacture of buildings and products reinforces his view that you should see buildings as building products. 'Think of the zigzag chair made from a cabinet shelf, the armchair made of bent plywood or the chair pressed out of a plate.'