Androgyne Side Table, Wide

Androgyne Side Table, Wide

Designer Danielle Siggerud

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Androgyne Side Table, Wide

Androgyne Side Table, Wide

Designer Danielle Siggerud

Color

Selected: Brushed Steel

Regular price $1,045.00
Regular price Sale price $1,045.00
Sale Sold out
Ready to ship on: January 17 2025
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SKU 1159039

Materials

Brushed steel or painted steel

Dimensions

H: 15 in
Ø: 24.8 in

Please note, the tabletop is sold separately. Find it here.

 

Perfectly proportioned with an intriguing combination of masculine and feminine elements, the Androgyne Side Table is a lesson in contrasts. Making clever use of craftsmanship, the large round tabletop is designed to overhang the corresponding base in a meeting of solid and soft lines. Its low profile and wide size make it ideal as a lounge table, used alone or in combination with others from the collection. Both base and top are sold separately and are available in two sizes in three metal finishes and with corresponding tabletops in Emperador, Calacatta Viola, Nero Marquina and Crystal Rose marble respectively for a complete and customized furniture piece.

 

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Danielle Siggerud

Danielle Siggerud is a Norwegian architect based in Copenhagen. She holds a Masters degree in architecture from the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Denmark. She established her studio in 2016 and today the practice works internationally, with projects stretching from London, New York, Stockholm to Paris. The scope of projects varies from private renovations, restorations and contemporary buildings to interior design, furniture making and smaller objects. Her work embodies a sharp vision of space and materials that can be recognized by her sensitive and contextual approach: embracing the essence of built forms, from the roughest construction to the smallest interior details. At the core of her work lies the strive for simplicity achieved by carefully balancing the fundamentals of architecture: space, proportion, light and materials. “These qualities are sought not simply as things of value in themselves, but as means to support a quality of human experience” she says.