Florence Knoll Credenza - New Edition
When Florence Knoll revolutionised private office design by replacing
the executive desk with a table, she need a place for all the filing that had
traditionally lived in desk drawers. Her solution, executed in typical Florence
Knoll elegance, was the low credenza. The iconic design works as well in the
dining room as it does in the office.
Prior to the pioneering approach of Florence Knoll and the Knoll
Planning Unit, executive offices in America were nearly all planned the same
way.
Florence Knoll described this standard layout in her
1964 “Commercial Interiors” entry for the Encyclopedia Britannica: “In such an
office there was always a diagonally-placed desk, with a table set parallel
behind it, a few chairs scattered around the edge of the room, and a glassed in
bookcase. The table behind the desk generally became an unsightly storage
receptacle.”
Seeking to create a space better suited to the
executive’s primary function — communication — Florence reconsidered the
illogical layout from an architectural perspective. She eliminated the imposing
desk, replacing it with the more inviting table desk, placed parallel to the
back wall. Storage was moved to behind the table in a low, matching credenza.
To execute this new layout, Florence introduced the 2544 Credenza in 1961. The elegant design exuded executive quality, and clearly exhibited Mies van der Rohe’s impact on Florence’s approach to design. Design historian Bobbye Tigerman notes that, “the furniture is architecture miniaturised…The structure of a large case balanced on thin peripheral columns recalls Mies’ Seagram Building.” Like Mies, Florence Knoll would endlessly refine each detail of a design in order to achieve simple, seemingly effortless beauty.
About Designer | |
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Florence Knoll |
While a student at the Kingswood School on the campus of the Cranbrook
Academy of Art in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, Florence Knoll Bassett (née
Schust) became a protegée of Eero Saarinen. She studied architecture at
Cranbrook, the Architectural Association in London and the Armour Institute
(Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago). She worked briefly for Walter
Gropius, Marcel Breuer and Wallace K. Harrison. In 1946, she became a full
business and design partner and married Hans Knoll, after which they formed
Knoll Associates. She was at once a champion of world-class architects and
designers and an exceptional architect in her own right. As a pioneer of the
Knoll Planning Unit, she revolutionised interior space planning. Her belief in
"total design" – embracing architecture, manufacturing, interior
design, textiles, graphics, advertising and presentation – and her application
of design principles in solving space problems were radical departures from the
standard practice in the 1950s, but were quickly adopted and remain widely used
today. For her extraordinary contributions to architecture and design, Florence
Knoll was accorded the National Endowment for the Arts' prestigious 2002
National Medal of Arts. |
