-
Use
Interior furniture -
Applications
Residential, hospitality -
Characteristics
Moulded plywood seat and back, legs and seat frame solid bentwood -
Sizes
W41, D49, H82, SH46
2 General Catalogs
2 General Catalogs
Max Ernst Haefeli, a pioneer of Swiss modernity, designed Switzerland's first architects chairs in 1926 for horgenglarus. Contrary to other designers, Haefeli didn't seek to break with tradition but created wooden furniture with a familiar feel to it. The simplicity, beauty of shape, and timelessness of Haefeli's wooden chair is legendary. Its premium workmanship is durable and sustainable. Basically, its shape hasn't changed since 1926. Its unobtrusive elegance and economical use of motion helped the haefeli to maintain its effect for decades and it remains a big hitter for residential spaces as well as hotels and restaurants to this day.
As early as in 1927, the Zurich handicraft museum showcased Haefeli's furniture in its "Form ohne Ornament" exhibition, including model 293, the first modular furniture of Swiss modernity. Since then, his chairs were published in prominent positions and exhibited regularly. With the haefeli, horgenglarus is producing a well-known piece of furniture forming part of Switzerland's visual culture. In 2014 for example, the "House of Switzerland" was furnished with the haefeli, As "Modell 4," the haefeli is part of Zurich's design museum collection.