Established in 1971, the Wood Awards is the UK’s premier competition for excellence in architecture and product design in the world’s only naturally sustainable material. The Awards are free to enter and aim to encourage and promote outstanding design, craftsmanship and installation using wood. Within the Furniture & Product competition there are three subcategories: Bespoke, Production and Student Designer.
BESPOKE
THE KISSING BENCHES
Designer/maker: Alison Crowther
Client/owner: Glyndebourne
Wood supplier: Neil Humphries
Timber conversion: Vasterns
Wood species: English oak
The Kissing Benches were made for the newly reinvented Figaro Garden at Glyndebourne. The garden required something that would complement and not draw attention away from the Henry Moore sculpture. These benches are a contemporary take on an old style of outdoor seating, designed to enable people to engage in conversation, embrace or kiss. Gigantic beam sections of green English oak have been hand carved to create an ergonomic and attractive seat surface. The benches were hand-carved using traditional gouges and mallets.
LITTORAL CHANCES 1&2
Designer/maker: David Gates
Vitreous enamel on steel panels: Helen Carnac
Wood supplier: Adamson & Low, English Woodland Timber and Timberline
Wood species: British European oak, bog oak, ripple sycamore, Cedar of Lebanon and Douglas fir, American bird’s eye maple
This unmatched pair of collecting cabinets is based on the beauty of chance composition. Gates is drawn to industrial and agricultural architecture, including jetties and pylons, and the paraphernalia that populates these sites, such as containers and crates. Gates is often struck by the balance and beauty of chance compositions; how stacked and piled objects present themselves sculpturally. The timber has been sawn, scraped, planed, and cleft to emphasise the woods’ varying surfaces.
MY SEOUL
Designer/maker: Cristina Zani
Wood supplier: GS Timber
Wood species: British beech, olive and lime
Inspired by Italo Calvino’s Invisible Cities, Zani’s work is a reflection on the urban environment. The My Seoul collection is influenced by the contrast between South Korea’s sombre modern architecture and its vibrant ancient wooden temples and painted palaces. Zani has borrowed elements from the city’s landscape to visually describe it and subtly suggest it to the viewer. Like South Korea’s architecture, the pieces show the vulnerability of materials when exposed to time and elements.
PRODUCTION
IAN MCCHESNEY BENCH
Designer: Ian McChesney
Manufacturer: Benchmark
Wood supplier: PB Hardwoods and English Woodlands Timber
Wood species: European oak or American Black Walnut
These highly crafted benches are made in two sizes. The gallery bench is designed to sit in the middle of a room and is 900mm deep to allow for sitting on both sides. The foyer bench is designed to sit at the edge of the room and is 600mm deep to allow for sitting on one side only. The gently pillowed top and bottom give the benches a very natural feel.
LATIS CHAIR
Designer: Samuel Wilkinson Studio
Manufacturer: The Conran Shop
Wood species: Ash
The LATIS range is a collection of three lightweight, versatile chairs that all share the same steam-bent frame made from a single piece of specially selected ash. The elegant Viennese-plaited lattice straw version is refined and super-light. There are also plywood and upholstered versions which are most suitable for commercial environments such as restaurants. All the seat components have been cut into recesses within the ash frames to ensure the chair appears light and modern.
MAX TABLE
Designer: Max Lamb
Manufacturer: Hem
Wood supplier: Zamperetti Legnami SpA
Wood species: American Douglas fir, white ash
At 3m long, Max Table is designed to be a centrepiece in any environment, from conference spaces to dinner parties at home. The table’s simplistic design is deceivingly sophisticated and has been carefully considered with shipping and smart assembly in mind. Douglas fir was selected for its virginal colour tone, characterful grain and ability to withstand usage.
SCIENCE MUSEUM LAB STOOL
Designer/manufacturer: King and Webbon
Client: Science Museum
CNC Routing: Fineline
Wood supplier: Winwood Products
Wood species: European beech ply
King and Webbon collaborated with the Science Museum to create a stackable stool that they hope to be the start of a new sustainable approach to flat-pack furniture. The stool is delivered in a robust, reusable cardboard storage case and can be put together in under 15 minutes using just an Allen key. The design is inspired by the classic stacking lab stools we remember from our school days. Made using beech, the stool offers a real solution to small space living.
STUDENT DESIGNER
Within the Student Designer category there are two cash prizes: £1000 for Winner and £500 for People’s Choice. Voting for the People’s Choice Award will take place at 100% Design.
BIO IRIDESCENT SEQUIN
Designer/maker: Elissa Brunato
University/college: Central Saint Martins
Wood supplier: Celluforce
Bio-engineering wood/cellulose: Research Institutes of Sweden (RISE)
Wood species: Canadian softwood Kraft pulp
Bio Iridescent Sequin is a response to the unsustainable shimmering beads and sequins currently used in fashion and textiles. Brunato’s sequin uses bio-technologies to create colourful shimmering sequins from naturally abundant wood. Through extracting the crystalline form of cellulose, the wood imitates the alluring visual aesthetics of shiny plastic while remaining lightweight, strong and compostable.
KENT STICK CHAIR
Designer: Matthew Hensby
University/college: Building Crafts College
Wood supplier: South East Forestry and Tyler Hardwoods
Wood species: English ash
Kent Stick Chair is a contemporary Windsor chair made from green ash selected from a coppiced woodland in Kent. Hensby’s ambition was to develop a contemporary chair from traditional processes. The chair was created using hand tools and embraces the textures made by the tools. The piece was assembled with moisture differential joinery, resulting in a chair that becomes tighter and stronger as the components dry around one another. The timber has been finished with an organic linseed oil paint.
BURNOUT
Designer: Francesco Feltrin
University/college: Royal College of Art
Wood species: spruce, pine, fir, birch and poplar
Feltrin was inspired by the Bruder Klaus Chapel by Swiss architect Peter Zumthor. Taking Zumthor’s idea of burning out a wooden mould, Feltrin adapted it to work with low-hazard resin and paper. The paper is rolled andtwisted in different variations to create a mould that is later burnt out. Burnout is about designing the void that will be chiselled by fire. A layer of newspaper pages remains stuck to the final object, transforming a disposable newspaper in something that will last for decades.
ISO CABINETS
Designer: Jack Bibbings
University/college: Building Crafts College
Wood supplier: Tyler Hardwoods
Wood species: English ash and oak
These playful cabinets have been inspired by Bridget Riley and the Op-Art movement, which is based on geometric abstraction and illusion. The name Iso refers to the fact that the cabinets’ geometry is based on an isometric drawing that incorporates 30-, 60- and 90-degree angles. Iso also points to the Greek word for equal as the carcasses of each cabinet are exactly the same.
UDON STOOL
Designer: Anton Mikkonen
University/college: The Sir John Cass School of Art
Wood species: ash
As a young boy Mikkonen was fascinated by woodgrain and knots. He would look for knots near each other and create faces and other shapes. With the Udon Stool, Mikkonen has matched the uniqueness of woodgrain with a very unique aesthetic. The stool consists of five parts, all CNC routed with a 2D CNC machine.