From Cannonballs to Modern Bathrooms: 275 Years of Villeroy & Boch

What if François Boch –a frustrated French cannonball foundryman who left it behind to instead found a pottery workshop with his sons in Audin-le-Tiche, France– had never existed? What might the modern bathroom look like today?

We can't answer that, of course, but we do know that Boch's decision in 1748 certainly laid one of the founding stones for it – even if they started out only making simple clay pots and jugs. The business quickly flourished and history took its course. This was also due to the fact that, with the help of some new formulas, the company succeeded in producing lighter earthenware and more elaborate shapes that were more affordable than expensive porcelain.

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The brand’s roots can be traced back to the manufacture of clay vessels. Many stages of development later, its reputation owes much to its high-quality tableware in particular. Here, La Boule Memphis, a complete dinnerware set from 1971 by Helen von Boch. Image Courtesy of Villeroy & Boch

After Boch died, his sons began early industrial series production in Septfontaines, Luxembourg. This is where the famous Brindille dinnerware was created in 1770, designed by Pierre-Joseph Boch and which can still be found today in the classic Vieux Luxembourg collection – now made of porcelain.

Boch Becomes Villeroy & Boch

The range of products as well as its output expanded in 1809, when the third-generation Jean-François von Boch, a physicist and chemist, converted an old abbey in Mettlach in Saarland –today's company headquarters– into a modern factory. This expansion didn't come without the pressure of competition, however.

In order to be able to stand up to the domination of British industry, von Boch joined forces with the merchant and tableware manufacturer Nicolas Villeroy in 1836. From then onwards, the future was all about Villeroy & Boch, built on a close friendship, a strong business relationship and later even love – with the marriage of their children Octavie Villeroy and Eugen von Boch.

It was the latter who finally set the company on the path to tile production. The Mettlach tile was born and conquered the floors and walls of the world from the end of the 19th century – in bathrooms and hospitals as well as in castles, theaters and churches, from Northern and Eastern Europe via Turkey and Egypt to North and South America.

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Since 1899, the production of sanitary ceramics has played an increasingly important role alongside tableware products. Image Courtesy of Villeroy & Boch

At the same time, the focus also shifted to sanitary ceramics, bathtubs and toilets, and from 1899 onwards, Villeroy & Boch continued with the production of washing utensils, which had been established since the end of the 18th century. Parallel to this, the company also continued to expand in the field of tableware into the 20th century.

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A revolution in the bathroom: In a collaboration with designer Luigi Colani, the idea to redefine the bathroom as a homely place to relax was born in 1975. This vision shaped bathroom design across all brands for decades to come. Image Courtesy of Villeroy & Boch

Style-Defining and Pioneering

It was not until 1975, however, that Villeroy & Boch really became a pioneer for the modern bathroom, when a collaboration with designer Luigi Colani revolutionized the concept of it as a functional space. From now on, the bathroom, according to the premise, would be an organically shaped and colorful place of well-being and self-development. The principle of homeliness in the bathroom would have been hardly even conceivable without Colani. He has collaborated with numerous designers, including Sebastian Conran, Christian Haas and Gesa Hansen, on designs that have been accompanied by technological innovations and material developments, and allow ever more minimalist and filigree forms.

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Elements of nature: With Antao, Villeroy & Boch has been offering a complete bathroom collection based on the design of the Cologne-based design duo kaschkasch since this year. Image Courtesy of Villeroy & Boch

So in this, the anniversary year of 2023, Villeroy & Boch is proud to launch a special new comprehensive bathroom collection, the culmination of 275 years of know-how: Antao by the Cologne duo of kaschkasch. Inspired by nature, it is the embodiment of restorative power.

It seems then that François Boch did the right thing all those years ago, getting out of the cannonball business.

About this author
Cite: Markus Hieke. "From Cannonballs to Modern Bathrooms: 275 Years of Villeroy & Boch" 23 Nov 2023. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1009851/from-cannonballs-to-modern-bathrooms-275-years-of-villeroy-and-boch> ISSN 0719-8884

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