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Carlos Jané Camacho
This chair was expressly designed for installations, to withstand rough treatment, to be easily stackable, and to be attached together forming rows.
To withstand rough treatment, it had a mixed structure: metallic for the rear legs, where the efforts are more demanding and where our skin doesn’t touch; wood for the seat, backrest, armrests, and front legs.
For easy stacking, each chair rested only on the armrests of the one below; this was the only way I found to avoid damaging the seat when it was upholstered.
To be attached together in rows, I invented a device that I consider a true finding. One chair linked to the next through its own structure, without using any mechanism –visible or hidden, retractable or removable–: you simply had to lift it for one armrest to embrace the adjacent one, binding both chairs inseparably. Observing a single chair alone, it would be impossible to guess the linking mechanism.
(Out of production)