BATHROOM & KITCHEN TODAY15 Jul 2019
A cinematic experience for the mind to explore at LivingKitchen 2019: Alfredo Häberli’s vision of a kitchen of the future
Views: 304

Communicating a vision like this calls for unconventional forms of presentation. Many visitors’ initial response to Future Kitchen was irritation because the designer’s bold and, in some respects, radical design for tomorrow’s kitchen largely dispensed with kitchen furniture and other elements of equipment. With the exception of a long glass table, a scattering of chairs and a recliner, there were hardly any real products on display in the green architecture. Its long, high walls of shelving, designed for food storage, brought to mind a bakery display counter. The sleeping and bathing areas were both only represented symbolically in the form of spread-out sleeping bags and a mobile toilet cabin. The cabin doubled as a selfie box, and its blue colour gave photos a space travel look – a detail that reveals the true character of the installation by the witty cult designer.

  
Future Kitchen presented designs for kitchen appliances and accessories in augmented reality
But their initial irritation was quickly followed by inspiration. With the aid of audio guides, the screens of the tablets provided for the installation’s visitors allowed Häberli’s fantastical world of ideas to unfold. In augmented reality, appliances and accessories whose concepts and designs could hardly have been more unorthodox appeared in the appropriate places in the kitchen.

 
The designer created a total of eleven kitchen gadgets and appliances for Future Kitchen. By scanning one of the QR codes positioned on the green surfaces, Future Kitchen visitors could discover the designs on a smart device. They included a transparent, horizontal refrigerator, developed by Alfredo Häberli in collaboration with Samsung. The appliance is designed to ensure that all the food and drink stored inside is always visible, thus avoiding unnecessary opening and searching. Häberli proposed that the energy released when the fridge door is opened could be fed into an integrated lower storage area that serves as a warming rack for tableware. A trapezoid-shaped, ultra-thin, portable hotplate, developed by the designer in partnership with Schott Ceran, also featured among the designs. It can be positioned anywhere and has a dual function: it both cooks and keeps meals warm. In Häberli’s vision of tomorrow’s kitchen, the oven can descend from the ceiling when required. His oven is also transparent so that everything going on inside is visible at all times, which reduces heat losses from unnecessary opening of the door. Additional products were developed or integrated with partners including the manufacturers Alias, arwa, Astep, Atelier Pfister, Baltensweiler, Flos, New Tendency and Petersen Tegl. Häberli made resource conservation the key concept on which all the product designs were based.

A kitchen with a vegetable garden and a flying oven
In the holistic installation of a model home, the kitchen area appeared immediately alongside the entrance. The designer hinted at a garden for crop plants flanking it. But it was the kitchen that occupied a large and prominent position within the installation. For Häberli, this room has always been and will remain the centre of the home. The Swiss designer was delighted to receive the invitation from Koelnmesse to design Future Kitchen: “The request from Koelnmesse was naturally an honour for me. As a designer, I’m always working on developing tomorrow’s kitchen. I deliberately want to elevate my design to a certain level of abstraction because the times in which we are living are moving incredibly fast. I therefore decided to base my design for Future Kitchen on a blend of minimalist architecture and virtual reality. As such, the majority of the kitchen can be seen only virtually in augmented reality.”

 
For LivingKitchen, Alfredo Häberli took a very intellectual and bold approach to designing his Future Kitchen. In the context of degrowth and resource shortages, he questioned established standards and consciously gave visitors the mental freedom to envisage their own kitchens of the future in response to the virtual stimuli. This is an idea that Dick Spierenburg, Creative Director of imm cologne and LivingKitchen, wholeheartedly endorses: “As a trade fair, we don’t see ourselves as just a platform for product innovations in interior design; we’re also a forum for discussions. This is why we’re delighted that the new Future Design event developed for LivingKitchen in Hall 4.2 has offered designers and trade fair visitors a truly experimental platform

where more radical ideas, such as Alfredo Häberli’s Future Kitchen, can be presented. These kinds of platforms leave a space for comment and encourage the whole industry to reflect.”