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KnollStudio

Florence Knoll Dining Table 94" x 39"

Florence Knoll 1961

With her typical modesty, Florence Knoll described her own line of desks as the “meat and potatoes” which had to be provided. “I did it because I needed the piece of furniture for a job and it wasn’t there, so I designed it.” While this may have been the motivation for the 1961 Table Desk, the result is anything but a fill-in piece. Perfectly proportioned and flawlessly detailed, the design embodies Florence Knoll’s adherence to the teachings of her favorite mentor, Mies van der Rohe.

Details

Downloads for Florence Knoll Dining Table - 94" x 39"

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General Info

Planning Tools

Finishes

  • color Arabescato
  • color Calacatta
  • color Carrara
  • color Grey
  • color Grigio Marquina
  • color Espresso Marble
  • color Verdi Alpi
  • color Nero Marquina
  • color Arabescato
  • color Calacatta
  • color Carrara
  • color Grey
  • color Grigio Marquina
  • color Espresso Marble
  • color Verdi Alpi
  • color Nero Marquina
  • color Carrara
  • color Natural Oak
  • color Medium Brown Mahogany
  • color Medium Red Mahogany
  • color Ebonized Oak
  • color White Laminate
  • color Black Laminate
  • color Chrome, Polished
  • color Chrome, Satin

Dimensions

As head of the Knoll Planning Unit, Florence Knoll always approached furniture design with the larger space in mind. Most important to her was how a piece fit into the greater whole — the room, the floor, the building. Every element of a Knoll-planned space supported the overall design and complemented the existing architecture.

Never one to compromise, Florence would often design furniture when she “needed the piece of furniture for a job and it wasn’t there.” And while she never regarded herself as a furniture designer, her quest for harmony of space and consistency of design led her to design several of Knoll’s most iconic pieces—all simple, none plain.

As skyscrapers rose up across America during the post-war boom, Florence Knoll saw it as her job to translate the vocabulary and rationale of the modern exterior to the interior space of the corporate office. Thus, unlike Saarinen and Bertoia, her designs were architectural in foundation, not sculptural. She scaled down the rhythm and details of modern architecture while humanizing them through color and texture.

Among these were a series of End Tables that, in their slim frames, extended the aesthetic of modernism to every corner of the office. In celebration of the designer’s 100th birthday, Knoll introduced new products to the Florence Knoll Collection, including a line of Dining Tables and a Mini Desk, that echo the successful forms of her past designs and translate Shu’s architectural sensibilities from the corporate office to the home.