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Lazada
Designed by Le Corbusier
Lampe de Marseille was named after the Unit? d?Habitation in Marseille, the massive building designed between 1949 and 1952 by Le Corbusier and a symbol of Brutalist architecture.
Variation
$1,480.00
Between 1951 and 1957, Le Corbusier designed the Sanskar Kendra Museum, a museum in the Indian city of Ahmedabad. The spiral shaped building contains all the fundamentals of his architecture. For this project, in 1954 Le Corbusier conceived a lighting system he named ?Projecteur?, installed in the structure to maximise the lighting effect
$1,030.00
$340.00
$20,940.00
Designed by Le Corbusier in 1951/52 for the public spaces of the Unit? d?Habitation in Marseille, Escargot is only available in a limited edition, enhanced by its unique sculptural form inspired by nature. Made of burnished brass with an internal reflector for a diffused indirect lighting effect.
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Residents first product to launch and now an iconic recognised design staple, Spar is a large cantilevered floor light that takes inspiration from the mast arrangements of classic sailing boats. With a simple two-dimensional silhouette that relies on a tensioned electrical cable for support, and a spun aluminium shade that rotates 360 degrees allowing for […]
$1,790.00
Suspension lamp in aluminum, composed of a slender structure with three light points and diffusers that can be selected according to different versions. Spot version available for punctual lighting, version with spherical diffuser in opal blown glass and version with a metallic cone in burnished gold and black finish that allows more light diffusion.
$1,050.00$892.50
With the Bellevue Lamp, Danish architect and designer Arne Jacobsen embodies the minimalism of the Modernist Movement with the functionalism of Bauhaus. Viewed as the driving force behind Danish Modernism, JacobsenÕs preference for graceful lines and simple, organic forms are readily recognisable in the Bellevue lamp.
$630.00
A symbol in the history of design, spaghetti is the first Alias chair to appear in the MoMA collection of New York. The Spaghetti chair is an excellent example of material and formal simplicity that multiplies, in its many variants, the opportunities for use.