Plane Round Dining Table
$7,500
–
$9,250
$7,500
–
$9,250
$7,500
–
$9,250
$7,500
–
$9,250
$7,500
–
$9,250
$7,500
–
$9,250
$7,500
SKU: RES-PLA002N
$7,700
SKU: RES-PLA002U
$8,250
SKU: RES-PLA003N
$8,450
SKU: RES-PLA003U
$9,000
SKU: RES-PLA004N
$9,250
SKU: RES-PLA004U
Description
Remarkably poised despite its seemingly unbalanced proportions, New Zealand designer Jamie McLellan adds a round dining version to his stacked-plank table series. Plane's solid engineering assures the center-aligned boards, cross beam and tabletop are securely held together with clever internal bracketing that's smartly hidden away within the solid timber. And the table ships efficiently flat-packed by maker Resident of New Zealand for untroubled easy assembly on arrival.
Specifications
Size
- Small: 29.5" h x 47.2" dia (75x120cm)
- Medium: 29.5" h x 55.1" dia (75x140cm)
- Large: 29.5" h x 63" dia (75x160cm)
Material
Solid oak
Brand
Resident
“I’d be ripping my hair out if something took more than half an hour to put together,” says Resident founder Simon James on the subject of flat-pack furniture, something he knows quite a lot about. “Most of our products wouldn’t have more than five or six screws, maximum, nor do they take longer than 5 or 10 minutes to put together.” That’s just one of the innovative qualities of the New Zealand contemporary design and manufacturing company established in 2011. With equal parts dedication to an authentic brand of craft and an eclectic but refined aesthetic, Resident has quickly made a indelible impression.
Set up in a cleverly international way with a small head office in Auckland and a distribution hub in the UK to equal the supply-time equal of its European counterparts, Resident manufactures both in New Zealand and Europe. (Partner Scott Bridgens’ knowledge of logistics comes from previously working as operations manager for Brit design firm Tom Dixon.) A small stable of designers, artists and architects—all New Zealanders and based in various parts of the globe—keeps things tight design-wise. As Simon says: “We’ve gone with people we know and whose work we admire.”
Designer
Jamie McLellan
“I do like to strip things away to the bare essence of a structure but it's once I'm at that stripped away point (that) I can't restrain myself." says designer Jamie McLellan, who divides his practice between New Zealand and New York. "I have to maximize something, find a detail and dial it up." It's a winning formula for Jamie, who runs a small-product and furniture design studio, based out of a boat shed, just minutes from downtown Auckland. His clients range from established brands to small, highly innovative start-ups—everything from lighting to luxury watercraft and furniture to woolen footwear.
Graduating with a degree in industrial design, Jamie worked for British design heavyweight Tom Dixon before striking out on his own. Having lived in Italy, Hong Kong, Londo