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Emeco 1006

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Emeco 1006
Inception1944
AvailableYes
Current supplierEmeco
Last production yearCurrent
WebsiteOfficial website

The Emeco 1006 (pronounced ten-oh-six) is an aluminum chair manufactured by Emeco. It is also known as the Navy or Miami chair.[1][2] The 1006 was originally built for Navy warships during World War II, but later became a designer chair used in high-end restaurants and by interior designers. In the 1990s, the company began creating designer versions of the 1006 chair, such as the stackable Hudson chair and the 111 made from recycled plastic. Emeco also makes stools, tables, and other furniture.

History

Emeco founder Wilton C. Dinges developed the Emeco 1006 chair in 1944 in collaboration with the Aluminum Company of America (ALCOA).[3][4] It was originally designed for the US Navy, which needed a chair for the deck of battleships that could survive sea air and a torpedo blast to the side of the ship.[1][3] The chairs had eye bolts under the seat, so they could be attached to a ship-deck using cables.[5]

After the war, Emeco started selling 1006 chairs to prisons, hospitals and government offices.[6] The chair was sold to restaurants in the 1980s and 1990s, under Jay Buchbinder's leadership,[5][7] then as a designer chair in the 2000s after Emeco was acquired by his son, Gregg.[7] French designer Philippe Starck designed a total of 14 chairs and 4 tables for Emeco.[5][6]

Emeco 2006 chairs in Long Beach, CA

Emeco began working with Starck on its first chair with a plastic seat in 2001; it was later released as the Broom chair.[8] In 2006 Coca-Cola collaborated with Emeco to create a 1006-based chair[9] made out of recycled Coca-Cola bottles.[8] Metropolis Magazine said it was a public relations effort by Coke to make a durable product out of their bottles; they also hoped to encourage other manufacturers to do the same.[8] An Emeco 2006 chair was introduced in the year 2006, in collaboration with British architect Norman Foster, and the company continued to collaborate with other designers.[3][10][11]

In 2005, Target started selling an Emeco 1006 imitation product supplied by Euro Style. The supplier said it planned to modify the chair's style to avoid a legal dispute over alleged trademark infringement.[11] In October 2012, Emeco filed a lawsuit against Restoration Hardware for allegedly making unauthorized reproductions of the 1006 Navy chair.[12] Restoration Hardware removed the chair from its website, stopped selling the chair, and reached a undisclosed settlement with Emeco.[13]

The Emeco 1006 chair is featured regularly in design magazines and movies, such as The Matrix,[1][4][14] Law & Order and CSI.[11] In Europe the original 1006 chair is sometimes referred to as "the prison chair" due to its use in government prisons and in prison-related movie scenes.[14]

Description

The original Emeco 1006 chair has a curved back with three vertical struts[12] and a slight curve on the back legs.[3] It weighs about seven pounds[5][6] and is guaranteed to last 150 years.[12] Most of the original chairs from the 1940s are still in use.[1] The traditional aluminum chairs are made mostly out of recycled aluminum, but also silicon, iron, copper, magnesium, chromium, titanium and zinc.[2] Emeco 111 chairs are made out of 60 percent recycled plastic and 30 percent glass fiber. The Broom product line was later introduced to improve the use of recyclable materials, being made of 75 percent recycled plastic and 15 percent sawdust. The remaining 10 percent of the Emeco 111 and the Broom chairs is made up of colorings and molding materials.[8] The Emeco 111 chair was named based on it being made of at least 111 recycled Coca Cola bottles.[8]

The Hudson chair

As of 2014, there are approximately 88 Emeco chair models.[15] The first designer version of the 1006 chair in the "Emeco by Starck" line[5][6] was the Hudson chair,[8] named after the Hudson Hotel that put a Hudson chair in every room.[2][3] It has a similar silhouette as the original 1006, but has a reflective or brushed aluminum surface, a solid backrest and is stackable.[5][6] It also came in swivel and upholstered versions.[2] The reflective glossy versions of the 1006 chair are polished for eight hours, substantially increasing their cost.[5] Some variants of the 1006 chair use wood, upholstery or fiberglass;[6] there are also Emeco-brand barstools, swivel chairs, rocking chairs and armchairs.[7] The more minimalist "Superlight" chair was introduced to the line in 2004.[11][16]

Emeco's chairs are manufactured by hand in Hanover, Pennsylvania[5][6] through a two-week, 77-step process.[1][5] Eames Demetrios, the grandson of designer Charles Eames, published a documentary film on the manufacturing process called "77 Steps."[3][11] Many believe the chair is cast from a single form, but it is actually welded together from 12 pieces.[1][5] Sheets of aluminum are rolled into tubes, cut to length, and bent into shapes on large hydraulic machines. Various notches and punchouts are made so pieces can fit together before welding.[17] Workers grind down the welding joints to give it a smooth finish, creating the appearance of being cast from a single piece.[17] The chair goes through a repeated heating and cooling cycle that increases the strength of the aluminum.[1] The chairs are also anodized.[17] Originally swivel chair bases and other parts were purchased from a supplier, but in the 1950s, Emeco began purchasing manufacturing equipment to manufacture them in-house.[17]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Hogrefe, Jeffrey (May 2000). "Peace Work". Metropolis Magazine. pp. 84–89. Retrieved June 9, 2015.
  2. ^ a b c d Lasker, David (July 2000). "Philippe Starck updates a wartime design icon". Canadian Interiors.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Hales, Linda (August 22, 2000). "A Craft Is Saved as U.S. Navy Chair Becomes a Design Icon : Ode to a Wartime Workhorse". The New York Times. Retrieved June 9, 2015.
  4. ^ a b Stuhldreher, Tim (June 18, 2010). "Hot Seat". Central Penn Business Journal.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Lasky, Julie (May 2000). "French Twist". Interiors Magazine. pp. 106–111. Cite error: The named reference "two" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Gandee, Charles (April 16, 2000). "Ship Shape". New York Times Magazine. pp. 104–105. Retrieved June 8, 2015.
  7. ^ a b c Beck, Ernest (October 2004). "How I Did It: Gregg Buchbinder – And sometimes your market finds you". Inc Magazine.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Kristal, Marc (May 11, 2012). "Starck's Material World". Metropolis Magazine. pp. 96–97.
  9. ^ Keeps, David (May 30, 2010). "Coke classic you can sit on". Chicago Tribune.
  10. ^ Marcus Fairs (2009). Green Design: Creative Sustainable Designs for the Twenty-first Century. North Atlantic Books. p. 76. ISBN 978-1-55643-836-3.
  11. ^ a b c d e Hales, Linda (July 9, 2005). "Not Exactly a Stand-Up Move". Washington Post. Retrieved June 25, 2015.
  12. ^ a b c Lasky, Julie (October 10, 2012). "Once Again, Seeing Double". The New York Times. Retrieved June 8, 2015.
  13. ^ Murg, Stephanie (January 29, 2013). "Naval Battle Ends as Emeco, Restoration Hardware Settle Chair Dispute". Adweek. Retrieved June 10, 2015.
  14. ^ a b Rogalski, Ulla (February 15, 2002). "Aluminum Design Gains Luster". The Wall Street Journal. pp. W4.
  15. ^ Rocca, Mo (January 6, 2014). "Exploring the History of an Iconic Chair". CBS This Morning. Retrieved June 9, 2015.
  16. ^ Weeks, Katie (July 2004). "Homeward bound". Metropolis Magazine. p. 28.
  17. ^ a b c d "Making a fortune... in aluminum office chairs" (PDF). Modern Metals. March 1953.