star
Design Markus Jehs & Jurgen Laub,
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For making an impression and for concentration. For traditional office plans or for open, communicative room arrangements. The modular workplace system is made for unique private offices, for team workplaces, for meeting areas and for project work. Star is a comprehensive office programme which allows the realisation of complex projects using consistent design concepts and materials. Tables, containers and highboards are the basic elements. Functional, of premium quality, and with an individual clear look. The tabletops in various sizes and shapes are available in selected fine veneers or structured lacquer for finely structured, gleaming matte surfaces. Containers and highboards are available in lacquer aluminium silver, lacquer black metallic or lacquer white structure.
1800W*900D*730H
2000W*1000D*730H
2200W*1000D*730H

Stuttgart designers Markus Jehs (left, born 1965) and Jürgen Laub (right, born 1964) have set a steady course for success. Whilst their day-to-day work consists of designs for such renowned brands as Cassina, Cor, Fritz Hansen, Nemo, Thonet or Ycami, flamboyant special projects like “room 606 – ice cracks” at the Ice Hotel in northern Sweden indicate the freshness of their approach and testify to the pleasure they find in pure design that does not pursue a concrete aim. Even so, their classic product and interior design projects are anything but boring. Jehs + Laub combine “German” virtues like functionality, formal stringency and clarity with extraordinary imagination in terms of their concepts and use of materials. Their solutions seem strikingly simple, a combination of aesthetics and logic that reveals itself at first glance. That may well be because they always start from a strong basic idea, as they say. “Ideally, a product will then develop all by itself.” Sounds simple. Just like their concept for the new Mercedes Benz showroom that has been implemented worldwide: the rectangle, compasses and triangle or set square stand for product stage, communication and space segmentation. The space chair for Fritz Hansen already looks like a classic and uses different covers to show a variety of faces – sometimes business-like, sometimes trendy.
A view into the history of Renz shows a development equally shaped by continuity and dynamism. Within four generations the small, but fine furniture factory- which was founded in 1882, has expanded to the status of a sizeable venture with an international clientele. Today, the company presents itself, under the leadership of Eckart Renz, as an insider brand for sophisticated object furniture.