Metal TV stand and bookcase
Elegant TV stand and bookcase made in Italy with matt black painted iron structure. Adelaide metal is a suspended and versatile TV stand created by designer Claudio Bitetti for Mogg. TV stand with tube designed for cable passage, complete with 10 shelves (n°5 measuring 20x30 cm, n°4 measuring 25x30 cm, the shelf under the TV is 60x20 cm) and support for TV with Standard Vesa (centre distance 20x20 and 40x40 cm).
MAX 65 inch televisions.
Predisposed for ceiling fixing (ceiling height from 236 to 302 cm) When ordering, specify the length of the upper terminal (A-B-C) based on the ceiling height, see diagram. Feet and screws in brass finish.
Terminal A of 23 cm for ceilings H. from 236 to 260 cm
Terminal B of 44 cm for ceilings H. of 260 to 281 cm
Terminal C of 65 cm for ceilings H. of 281 at 302 cm
Dimensions cm: L. 60 x D. 55 x H.236/302
Material: iron
Design: CLAUDIO BITETTI
born in Aosta in 1962, graduated in Industrial Design at the Faculty of Architecture in Milan, works as a designer collaborating with companies such as Alivar, Ciatti a Tavola, Dilmos, EmmeBi, Minottiitalia, Mogg, Movelight, Sturm Und Piastic is an interior designer creating shops and private homes. His approach to the project is expressed through concepts such as flexibility, the dynamism of the forms, the decomposition to the minimum terms, strengthened by an aesthetic idea that aims to poeticize the object without diminishing its recognisability and functional effectiveness. As Elio Franzini, professor of Aesthetics at the University of Milan, wrote, “Claudio Bitetti's forms, in the design (and bodily) dialectic of the I-we, are therefore symbols, that is, they have an 'open' sense, an invisible that exhibits through the visible”. Thus, in the search for meaning that goes beyond the traditional concept of use value, Claudio Bitetti outlines, as stated by Fiaviano Celaschi, professor and deputy dean of the Faculty of Industrial Design in Milan, "a repertoire of projects that cross the space of the house , forcing those who experience it to exploit the plurality of senses, to use double meaning, to develop common sense."