he oldest machinery workshop in Finland is
in Fiskars, a village of craftspeople and creatives about
an hour northwest of Helsinki. This gable-roofed
red brick structure, built in 1837, has been home, since
1993, to Nikari, a maker of high-quality sustainable
wood products. Its catalogue encompasses some of
the most celebrated names in Nordic design – from
Alvar Aalto and Kaj Franck to Louise Campbell and
Claesson Koivisto Rune. So the addition of a South
Korean designer to its roster, for this year’s Wallpaper*
Handmade, has been a gamble of sorts.
To say that Kunsik Choi comes from a variegated
background would be an understatement. Born in
South Korea, he studied industrial design at Politecnico
di Milano before returning to Asia for work. A visit
to Kitani, a Japanese manufacturer specialising in
Nordic design, inspired him to enrol in a three-year
cabinetry course at Swedish craft school Capellagården.
His graduation project, a dollhouse-like storage system
made from 589 pieces of pear, maple and wenge,
found its way to the 2016 Stockholm Furniture Fair,
where it caught the eye of our interiors director
Amy Heffernan, who felt Choi, now based in Malmö,
would make an excellent collaborator for Handmade.
The Wellness + Wonder theme of this year’s
exhibition reminded Choi of the eight dimensions
of wellness, a model proposed by the US Department
of Health and Human Services. It suggests that
overall wellness comprises eight facets: emotional,
environmental, financial, intellectual, occupational,
physical, social and spiritual. ‘Of the eight categories,
I was most interested in the physical,’ says Choi.
His thoughts turned to friends who were exercising
at home with increasing frequency as they didn’t have
time to head to the gym. Traditional gym equipment,
he believes, tends to be a domestic eyesore. So he
wanted to create something that could accommodate
a wide range of physical exercises while blending
seamlessly into a modern, minimalist abode.
Choi’s solution was a wooden bench that is sturdy
enough to double as a plyometric box, comfortable
enough for horizontal workouts, with a detachable
handle on top and a storage rack for dumbbells and
other fitness paraphernalia underneath. »
RIGHT, THE WORKOUT
BENCH BEFORE THE
CORK LAYER IS ADDED
ABOVE, THE BENCH WAS
ASSEMBLED AT NIKARI’S
GABLE-ROOFED RED
BRICK WORKSHOP IN
FISKARS, FINLAND
T
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