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2.1
Characteristics of Furniture
Furniture is objects of applied arts intended for mobile and permanent furnishing of
residential interiors. Among other things, it serves for storage, work, eating, sitting,
lying down, sleeping and relaxing. Furniture can be used individually, in suites or
sets.
A furniture suite (Fig. 2.1) is a collection of articles, often of different features,
but with a similar purpose, having identical or very similar aesthetic form. They are
made through the implementation of a specically determined design work, in
which goal might be, for example, furniture for the dining room: in a flat, residence
or hotel. A characteristic feature of a suite is that individual pieces of furniture can
be combined according to different, but logical rules. The following criteria for
completing suites are most frequently adopted: type of material, wood species, type
of surface nish, place of use of the furniture, and the historical period in which the
furniture was made or what period it refers to stylistically. A lounge suite can
consist of two or three armchairs, two double sofas or two corner reclining sofas.
A suite is also three armchairs, pouffe and reclining double sofa. Another suite can
be a corner reclining sofa and an armchair with a container. A suite for storage can
consist of a clothes cupboard, a library bookcase, a bar and glass case, as well as a
dresser, chest of drawers, glass case and cabinet. A suite for the dining room can
include a dresser, cabinet, dining table, chairs and side table. A kitchen suite usually
consists of upper and lower cabinets or built-in cabinets, but may be supplemented
with a table and chairs, buffet or bar. A suite of ofce furniture can consist of a
series of ling cabinets, shelves for les, cabinets with sliding shutters, work tables
with chairs and dividing walls. A suite of study furniture can include a desk, side
table, armchair, wardrobe, library bookcase and table with chairs.
A furniture set (Fig. 2.2) can contain both individual furniture pieces and furniture suites. Furniture constituting a set, unlike furniture included in suites, may
have a different purposes and different aesthetic and structural forms.
Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2015
J. Smardzewski, Furniture Design,
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-19533-9_2
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2.2
Classication of Furniture
Furniture belongs to the group of objects of applied arts, and many of them have
similar structural, technological, functional, operational and aesthetic features. For
these reasons, making a distinctive and obvious division of furniture is difcult and
to a large extent depends on the experience and intuition of the author of such a
division. The main difculties which may arise in the future, when creating new
divisions of furniture, result primarily from:
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2.2.1
In terms of purpose, i.e. the conditions and nature of use, furniture can be divided
into three distinct groups. For furnishing:
ofces and public buildings (ofce furniture, school furniture, dorm furniture,
hotel furniture, cinema furniture, hospital furniture, canteen furniture, common
room furniture, etc.),
residential rooms in multi-family and free-standing buildings (flat furniture,
kitchen furniture, bathroom furniture, garden furniture) and
transport (ship furniture, train furniture, aircraft furniture).
This division is extremely important, especially when shaping the technical
assumptions for a new product. The requirements and conditions of use included in
the design and manufacturing process are different for ship furniture, different for
ofce furniture and different for hospital or school furniture.
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In the group of furniture for ofces and public buildings, there is another
subgroup related to specic human activities:
furniture for administration,
furniture for ofces and studies and
furniture for workers.
The nature of work and method of use of rooms in ofce buildings and public
buildings requires designing furniture intended for managers, group leaders,
assistants and secretaries, employees working in groups and individually, serving
internal and external clients. Within this group, the separate subgroups constitute
hospital furniture, school furniture, furniture for waiting areas at train stations,
airports, as well as restaurant and cafe furniture. The nature of these furniture pieces
should correspond to the specic requirements of many different and often anonymous users. School and ofce furniture should be well suited to the anthropometric parameters of individual groups of users. Hospital furniture should be
conducive to rehabilitation and should minimise the negative phenomenon of
prolonged pressure of the human body on a mattress or seat. Furniture intended for
use in waiting rooms is required to ensure high durability and functionality, adapted
to the nature of travel of prospective users.
Furniture for residential rooms in multi-family and free-standing buildings
should comply with the requirements of individuals and families, living together in
a house or flat, as well as be able to perfectly incorporate into the room and make it
possible to perform everyday activities in these rooms. The furniture should
meet all the functional needs of the following zones: relaxation and lounging, sleep,
work, learning, preparing and eating meals, physiological needs and maintaining
personal hygiene, and storage.
Marine, vehicular (car and train) and aircraft transportation have very high
demands in terms of quality of material used in the manufacture of furniture, quality
of make and safety of use of furniture built into the body of the transport units
carrying people.
2.2.2
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Fig. 2.3 Furniture for sitting and lounging: a chair, b tabouret, c stool, d pouffe, e bar stool,
f armchair, g sofa, h chaise lounge, i corner sofa
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Fig. 2.4 Furniture for reclining: a bed, b couch, c mattress, d folding sofa, e sofa, f corner sofa
furniture and unfold or fold the reclining surface. However, if the dimensions of
the seat are signicant, the reclining function can be provided without the need
for transforming the geometry of the piece.
The group of furniture for working and eating meals mainly consists of tables, table
add-ons, desks, side tables, buffets and reception bays (Fig. 2.5). Tables can be used
to work, study, prepare and consume meals, games, as well as bases for apparatus,
instruments, flowers or lighting. Here, we distinguish tables for the dining room,
kitchen, conference rooms, construction ofces, trade ofces, editorials of magazines, schools, kindergartens, etc. The tables for dining rooms can usually change
the geometry of the work surface, increasing its length and at the same time, area
for future users. Tables and desks for ofces usually have a xed geometry of the
work surface, but they have step or stepless adjustment of its position height. The
change of the geometry of the work surface of ofce furniture is provided by
applying side tables and add-ons. These furniture pieces are designed by particularly considering the arrangement of devices and objects that are the basic equipment of the workplace, including the computer, telephone, notepad, writing
supplies, binders and other ofce accessories requiring compartments, drawers,
boxes, slides, hangers and top extensions. A problem at the design stage of the
integration of form, function and structure of the furniture piece is providing an exit
and hiding cables delivering certain media to electrical devices.
Reception bays are a unique type of furniture designed to work, for they are an
obvious flagship of an institutionthey stand in the lobby or the hallway, where
clients are welcomed. They should not only enable the performance of precision
work in a sitting position, but also hard work in a standing position.