Thursday, April 9, 2009

Bossa pendant luminaire

red dot award best of the best : product design 2007


Changing light – the symbiosis of form and function The natural light of our environment is highly differentiated and changes continuously – daylight is a combination of different wavelengths of varied intensity and thus hardly ever stays constant. According to our activities during the day we tend to vary and deliberately reduce the intensity of daylight – we use curtains, blinds or even sunshades. A functionally designed luminaire has to simulate natural light and, ideally, allows us to easily vary and individually adjust the intensity of its artificial illumination. The Bossa pendant luminaire was designed to offer such adaptability and highly user-oriented variability. For this purpose its design was focused on a simple form, which according to its designer Fernando Prado aims at allowing the user to “interact” with it in an easy-to-understand manner. An important aspect of its design has been to lend it effective glare control, which can be adjusted to suit the user’s needs. This glare control consists of a reflector and an aluminium disc in the lower part of the luminaire. This disc also serves as a counter-weight when the reflector is moved. This design thus made further elements unnecessary, elements which would have obtruded the uniform language of form. Through both the possibility to change between direct and indirect illumination and the mechanical adaptability of the reflector, the intensity of lighting can again and again be comfortably varied, thereby creating different lighting effects in the room. This pendant luminaire successfully embodies an interesting symbiosis of form and function – with its design that consistently complements its functionality, it creates a new aesthetics.


In-house design : Fernando Prado

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