The Architect Designer (Page 9)

The Architect Designers collection at Encyclopedia.Design explores how visionaries trained in architecture extend their expertise beyond buildings to design furniture, lighting, home decor, and industrial objects. Applying architectural principles—structure, proportion, materials, and function—these designers redefine everyday objects as functional works of art.

What You’ll Find in This Collection:

Profiles of Renowned Architect Designers – Explore the work of Le Corbusier, Frank Lloyd Wright, Zaha Hadid, Alvar Aalto, Jean Prouvé, and contemporary architect-designers.
Architectural Influence in Product Design – Discover how principles like form follows function, minimalism, and modularity shape furniture, lighting, and industrial objects.
Iconic Architect-Designed Objects – Learn about Le Corbusier’s LC4 Chaise Lounge, Alvar Aalto’s Paimio Chair, Eero Saarinen’s Tulip Table, and Zaha Hadid’s fluid furniture.
Materials & Structural Innovation – See how architects experiment with concrete, wood, glass, metal, and sustainable materials in object design.
The Future of Architect-Designed Objects – Explore how 3D printing, computational design, and parametric modeling are revolutionizing furniture and product design.

From Bauhaus-inspired chairs to parametric-designed furniture, architect designers blur the line between architecture, sculpture, and functional design, creating objects that are both artistic and structurally refined.

📌 Discover how architects bring their visionary spatial thinking to product design, redefining everyday objects through the lens of architecture.

Herbert Bayer: Painter, Designer, Architect

Herbert Bayer’s multifaceted career in visual communication, architecture, and painting is encapsulated in the seminal book “Herbert Bayer: Painter, Designer, Architect.” This comprehensive monograph delves into Bayer’s profound contributions.Read More →

Pierre Vago Sketch featured image

Pierre Vago was a Hungarian Architect and designer. He studied at the École Spéciale d’Architecture, Paris.

He settled in France in 1928, where he was editor-in-chief on three issues of the review L’Architecture d’aujourd’hui. After World War 2, he was active in reviving the journal and set up his architecture office. In 1948 he left the journal, and it was in 1948 that he became a member of UAM (Union des Artistes Modernes). He built the Basicila de Saint-Pi X (with architect Pierre Pinsard and engineer Eugéne Freysinnet) in Lourdes.Read More →