Interlocking Lounge Chairs

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Bunch by Liam De La Bedoyere Forms Sofas Through Offset Geometry

The Bunch chair by Liam de la Bedoyere is a modular seating concept designed as a standalone lounge chair that can combine seamlessly into a sofa without connectors. Each unit features a stepped profile, where the backrest is raised and set back while the seat extends forward. This offset creates a precise gap that allows a second chair to slide into place, aligning the two forms into a continuous seating surface.

The structure relies entirely on geometry rather than hardware, with the staggered relationship between seat and backrest determining how units connect. When placed side by side, the chairs create a unified silhouette that reads as a single object instead of separate pieces. The design sits directly on the floor with no visible legs, using a compact footprint and thick upholstered form to maintain comfort.

Trend Themes

  1. Interlocking Geometry Seating — Interlocking geometry creates furniture that assembles into continuous seating surfaces without visible connectors, shifting perceptions of modular pieces into singular forms.
  2. Tool-free Modularization — Elimination of hardware and reliance on shaped parts points to modular systems that can be reconfigured and scaled using only form-fit relationships.
  3. Seamless Visual Unification — A unified silhouette produced by offset components encourages designs that prioritize cohesive aesthetics over obvious joinery.

Industry Implications

  1. Furniture Manufacturing — Manufacturing processes could pivot toward precision cutting and upholstery techniques that favor geometric joins and reduce reliance on fasteners.
  2. Hospitality Design — Public and social spaces may adopt interlocking seating strategies that blend individual comfort with the appearance of curated, continuous installations.
  3. Office Space Planning — Workspace layouts might incorporate shape-based modular seating to create flexible collaborative zones that read as cohesive furniture rather than collections of chairs.

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