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Chopstick/Steamer Stool

Lead Designers
Prize(s)Silver in Home Interior Products / Interior Furniture
Entry Description

Ryan Horsman and Jason Dembski are graduate students in architecture at the University of Michigan. They developed the Chopstick/Steamer Stool as part of a summer abroad program at B.A.S.E. Beijing with support from founders Robert Mangurian and Mary-Ann Ray. The goal of this particular project?taking cues from Chinese culture and its ability to make excess/waste useful?was to (re)use everyday Chinese items in new ways. The Chopstick/Steamer Stool takes traditional bamboo steamers, thousands of disposable chopsticks and simple cushioning material, and combines them into a piece furniture.

The stool uses six bamboo steamers stacked vertically and bound. Peaking out of the top steamer is thousands of disposable chopstick?accumulated in less than a year by a ?one child policy? family?packed together and standing on end. Serving as a middleman between the steamers and the chopsticks is a basic cushion. Although foam is ideal, the cushion could be made of anything from an old rickshaw seat to a pile of rags. The cushion allows the chopsticks to move independently under pressure and prevents them from falling through the steamer racks. When combined in this way, these fundamental Chinese items form a deceptively comfortable stool which can reasonably be made without spending a single yuan.

Four stools were made this summer. At the time of entry two prototypes were on display in FEI Space in Beijing's 798 Arts District, and two others were sold through FEI Space.

Bio

Both Ryan and Jason are currently working towards their MArch degrees at the University of Michigan. Previously Ryan attended the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign where he received a B.S. in Architecture. Likewise, Jason received a B.S. in Architecture from the Ohio State University.
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Robert Mangurian and Mary-Ann Ray are educators (SCI-Arc and the University of Michigan) and practitioners. Their firm Studio Works tackles projects ranging in scale from furniture and objects up to parts of cities. They are recipients of the Chrysler Design Award,
Rome Prize, and Stirling Award for the Memorial Lecture on the City.
In 2006, with Robert Adams and Drew Hammond, they founded BASE in
Beijing. BASE is a laboratory for architecture, education, design and urbanism located in the urban village of Caochangdi on the edge of central Beijing.