Workshop: Weil Chair - Build Your Own! A chair for everyone (DE)

Papanek Stuhl Workshop
This event is available in
German
Vitra Schaudepot
Saturday | 5 October 2024 and 29 March 2025
10:30 am, Vitra Schaudepot

Affordable design for all – this idea, which is as old as design itself, has lost none of its relevance. Berlin-based architect and designer Van Bo Le-Mentzel brings this concept into the digital age by creating furniture designs and making the construction plans available online for people to download and build themselves. Led by our instructor, you will build your own Weil Chair based on a design created by Le-Mentzel for the workshop at the Vitra Design Museum.

€ 210 per person

Register here: https://design-museum.reservix.de/p/reservix/group/448152
Address
Vitra Design Museum
Charles-Eames-Straße 2
79576
Weil am Rhein
+49 7621 70 23 200
Tarif
Paid entry
210
Rate for holders of the Museums-PASS-Musées only.
Dates
Exhibitions in this museum
Key Visual »Nike: Form Follows Motion« © Vitra Design Museum, graphic design: Daniel Streat, Visual Fields
Exhibition
Weil am Rhein

With »Nike: Form Follows Motion« the Vitra Design Museum will present the first ever comprehensive museum exhibition about Nike, the world’s most revered sports brand. The exhibition will explore the ...

Elder's Rocking Chair, Mount Lebanon, NY, USA, ca. 1850-70; Jack E. Boucher and Elmer R. Pearson, Vitra Design Museum
Exhibition
Weil am Rhein

In spring 2025, the Vitra Design Museum will present a major exhibition about the unique design culture fostered in the United States by the Shakers. Established in the eighteenth century, this free ...

Chanel, Ready-to-Wear, Autumn/ Winter 2017/18, Grand Palais, Paris
Exhibition
Weil am Rhein

The fashion show combines stage design, clothing, performance, light and sound to create a temporary Gesamtkunstwerk. With the exhibition »Catwalk«, the Vitra Design Museum is dedicated to the fashion ...

Complicated Sofa, The Shipping, 2021 Kunstwerk von Andrés Reisinger
Exhibition
Weil am Rhein

Numerous science fiction films – from Star Trek to 2001: A Space Odyssey to Blade Runner – are populated by classic designs that have shaped our image of the future. In reverse, many designers of ...