ABOUT THE PRODUCT
The Mies van Der Rohe "Barcelona" Bench is a stylish smaller version of the day bed. Suitable for a variety of uses, from a hall way to a foot-stool or a stylish peice of reception furniture.
With fine detailing on the cushions, made up of 21 leather squares individually hand cut and sewn by leather craftsmen . Perfectly attached to the bed’s frame, the cushion and leather strapping offer the upmost comfort and support for the user.
MATERIALS
The bench has a walnut wood frame which stands on polished stainless steel legs. Finished with either Italian Leather upholstery and strapping or fabric of your choice. All Leather straps are the same colour as the leather chosen, on Fabric choices the straps will be black leather unless another leather colour is requested at the point of order.
Complies with BS5852 - Fire and Furnishings Regulations 1988.
All images shown are actual bluesuntree products
DIMENSIONS

Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe (Mies) was born in Germany in 1886. At the age of 19 he moved to Berlin, and started working with the art nouveau architect and furniture designer Bruno Paul. Over the next 10 years he studied the works of Frank Lloyd Wright and Karl Friedrich Schinkel. By 1912, he had his own studio in Berlin.
In 1927 Mies designed one of the design community’s most famous buildings, The German Pavilion at the International Exposition in Barcelona Spain. In it contained one of interior design’s most famous chairs, the Pavilion Chair. The Pavilion had a flat roof supported by columns, while the interior was constructed of glass and marble.
Mies is one of the pioneering masters of modern architecture, Mies, like many of his post war contemporaries, sought to establish a new architectural style that could represent modern times just as classical and gothic did for their own eras.
He created an influential twentieth-century architectural style, stated with extreme clarity and simplicity. His mature buildings made use of modern materials such as industrial steel and plate glass to define austere but elegant spaces. He developed the use of exposed steel structure and glass to enclose and define space, striving for architecture with a minimal framework of structural order, balanced against the implied freedom of open space.
He called his buildings "skin and bones" architecture. He sought to create a rational approach that would guide the creative process of architectural design, and is known for his use of the aphorisms “less is more” and "God is in the details".
Mies was Director of the Bauhaus School from 1930-1933. In 1937 he moved to Chicago where he became the Head of the architecture department at the Illinois institute of technology. During the next 15 years of his career, he designed skyscrapers for nearly every major American city.