Furnishing a loft: the essentials of industrial style
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The loft was born from the reconversion of industrial spaces into living spaces. From the factories of SoHo to the workshops of the Marais, these raw volumes – high ceilings, brick walls, metal beams – require furniture that matches their character. Not filler, but pieces that dialogue with the architecture.
The seat: between industrial heritage and modern comfort
In a loft, the chair is not a simple seat: it is a sculptural element that punctuates the space. The Navy Chair from Emeco, created in 1944 for the American Navy, is perhaps the quintessence of this approach. Its brushed aluminum catches the light and ages gracefully, just like the metal structures that surround it.
For passage spaces or kitchen islands, the Rowac Schemel stool brings another dimension. Produced since 1888 in Germany, it is the archetype of workshop furniture: cast iron base, beech wood seat, no decorative concessions. Its beauty comes precisely from this functional honesty.

The table: centerpiece of the loft
In a loft, the table often plays several roles: dining room, office, work surface, reception area. It must be large – at least 200 cm for a loft worthy of the name – and assert a presence without overwhelming the space.
The Sinus base, with its workshop-inspired trestle design, was born for this environment. Coupled with a 220 or 240 cm solid oak top, it creates a table that anchors the entire living space. The Stand base, with its independent legs, allows unusual configurations — L-shaped tables, integrated work surfaces, central islands.

Lighting: sculpting volumes
The large volumes of a loft require lighting designed in layers. General lighting (often industrial pendant lights) should be complemented by accent lighting that creates intimate areas in the open space. This is precisely the role of a table lamp like the Wästberg Pastille: to place a warm halo on a reading corner, a desk or a sideboard.
The w102 by David Chipperfield, with its articulated arm in raw aluminum, fits even more directly into the vocabulary of the loft. Its architectural aesthetic responds to the metal beams and exposed ducts.

Italian design: a refined counterpoint
The industrial style benefits from being tempered by more organic pieces. The Stagi/Leonardi chair, designed in the 60s in Modena, introduces a curve where everything is an angle. Its molded fiberglass design dialogues with metal and concrete without ever submitting to it. It is this type of contrast that gives a loft its soul: not a collection of industrial objects, but a conversation between eras and materials.


Furnish your loft with pieces of character
Discover our Emeco chairs, our Wästberg architect lamps, our designer table legs and our stools to compose an industrial and refined interior.