Everything Dwell’s Design News Editor Saw at Salone del Mobile In One Day and Seven Miles

From David Lynch's puzzling installation to the all-aluminum kitchen you didn't know you needed, the trade show experience was a dizzying array of what's new in design.

Everything Dwell’s Design News Editor Saw at Salone del Mobile In One Day and Seven Miles

From David Lynch's puzzling installation to the all-aluminum kitchen you didn't know you needed, the trade show experience was a dizzying array of what's new in design.

Sometimes we joke that it’s the "Superbowl of furniture design" or "South by Southwest for chairs," but more people attend Milan’s annual design week, anchored by the venerable trade show Salone del Mobile, than attend either of those events. Last year, "Salone" alone drew 307,000 visitors, increasing the population of the city of 1.3 million inhabitants by nearly 25 percent. For one week, Milan becomes the best place to discover the trends and ideas in furniture design from all over the world that will be coming to your living room soon. 

 Want to hear more about what's happening in the design world? Sign up for our pro newsletter.

I’m not a step counter. But at Salone del Mobile in Milan, the world’s biggest furniture fair, keeping track of them seemed like a good way to show just how much ground there is to cover. The property is 100 acres, making it one of the largest exhibition centers in the world (and just a big one in general), and there are around 20 buildings filled front to back with vendors. You could spend an entire day just turning faucets, if you wanted to.

But photographer Olga Mai and I were determined to see more than that. So we charted a course that, by day’s end, put us at 15,000 steps, or about seven miles, with zero coffee or bathroom breaks, but only because we forgot to take any. Really nice sofas occasionally let us rest our feet. A sauna briefly sealed us off from the cacophonous, echoing halls. Step by step, here’s a first-hand look at everything from Vipp’s new modular kitchen system, to film director David Lynch’s head scratcher of an exhibit, and the best sofas, faucets, and lamps that we saw in between. 

Vipp

Vipp, the Danish brand founded in 1939 by Holger Nielsen, has come a long way from the trash bin he founded the brand with. But the Danish company’s new modular kitchen system, a three-piece collection called V3, brings things back to that first design item, explains Sofie Egelund, co-owner of the company and Nielsen’s granddaughter. Interiors today have a lot of wood, she says, so they wanted to try something new with an all-metal look, similar to the bin that made their name.  As modular systems, V3’s three pieces—an island module, a tall module, and a wall module—can be ordered in different set lengths.

Going with head-to-toe anodized aluminum is a bit of a risk, but when asked if I’d put one in my kitchen, I didn’t balk.

Going with head-to-toe anodized aluminum is bold, but when asked if I’d put one in my kitchen, I didn’t balk.

Photo: Olga Mai


The industrial range controls resemble gears, giving you a good amount of dexterity with just your thumb.

The industrial range controls resemble gears, giving you a good amount of dexterity with just your thumb.

Photo: Olga Mai


Kallista

Next up was Kallista. New fixtures from the Kohler brand feature taps and handles in a range of seductive finishes and customizable touches.

These handles from the Guise collection, which, along with the tap, are single-cast pieces, featured one of two guilloche pattern inlays the company offers—mesmerizing, but subtle against the gray counter. The tap and flush-mount handles were buttery smooth to turn, and just as easy to look at.

 These handles from the Guise collection, which, along with the tap, are single-cast pieces, featured one of two guilloche pattern inlays the company offers—mesmerizing, but subtle against the gray counter. The tap and flush-mount handles were buttery smooth to turn, and just as easy to look at. 

Photo: Olga Mai

See the full story on Dwell.com: Everything Dwell’s Design News Editor Saw at Salone del Mobile In One Day and Seven Miles
Related stories: