「全球銷售量超過4,000,000張 AERON是人類有史以來最健康舒適的辦公椅」─引用自ppaper第80期2008/12/1
Product Story The Aeron chair didn't end up in the Museum of Modern Art's permanent collection just because it looks cool. Although it does. Its looks are only the beginning. Aeron accommodates both the sitter and the environment. It adapts naturally to virtually every body, and it's 94% recyclable. Even if it's black, it's green.
Designer 1984年 Bill Stumpf 與 Don Chadwick 合手設計。
Design Story We wanted a totally new kind of chair. Fortunately the two designers who had produced the groundbreaking Equa chair had already begun to think about the same thing. Don Chadwick and Bill Stumpf began their work of thinking about what a chair ought to do for a person with a clean slate. They questioned assumptions about function, form, and materials. Chadwick and Stumpf came to some solid conclusions.
Ergonomically, they decided a chair ought to do more than just sit there. It should actively intercede for your health when you sit in it longer than you should. Functionally, it ought to move and adjust as simply and naturally as possible. It should support you in any position you assume, at any task your office job serves up. Anthropometrically, a chair ought to be inclusive. It should do more than accommodate people who are larger or smaller than average size—it should really fit them. Environmentally, it ought to be benign. Its manufacture should be sparing of natural resources, and the chair itself should be durable and easy to repair, recyclable and easy to disassemble. The design that met these criteria redefined the very meaning of "work chair." It wasn't upholstered. It wasn't padded. It was dimensioned in three models that looked exactly alike and that had nothing to do with their people's job titles. It didn't look like any other office chair.
And its revolutionary concept incorporated more patentable ideas than any previous Herman Miller research program. "It was a matter of deliberate design to create a 'new signature shape' for the Aeron chair," says designer Bill Stumpf. "Competitive ergonomic chairs became look-alikes. Differentiation was a huge part of the Aeron design strategy, and it remains one of, if not the most, critical aspects of Aeron's success. "The human form has no straight lines; it is biomorphic. We designed the chair to be, above all, biomorphic, or curvilinear, as a metaphor of human form in the visual as well as the tactile sense. There is not one straight line to be found on an Aeron chair."
And what about the lack of cushions? Says Bill Stumpf, "The Pellicle was equally a deliberate design strategy in that its transparency symbolizes the free flow of air to the skin in the same way lace, window screens, and other permeable membranes permit the flow of air or light or moisture. The transparency of the chair as a visual element was in keeping with the idea of transparent architecture and technology, which Aeron pioneered in advance of Apple's transparent iMac computers. Transparency is a major design movement. Its purpose is to make technology less opaque, to communicate the inner workings of things, and to make objects less intrusive in the environment. Aeron is a nonintrusive chair." The Aeron design was refined and validated through research and experts' opinions:
- An early focus group of retired people highlighted the need for aeration and long-term comfort.
- It was tested for comfort with scores of users, pitting it against the best work chairs available.
- Leading ergonomists, orthopedic specialists, and physical therapists evaluated the chair's fit and motion, the benefit and ease of its adjustments.
- The design team conducted anthropometric studies across the country, using a specially developed instrument to calculate everything from popliteal (back of the knee) height to forearm length
- The research team did pressure mapping and thermal testing to determine the weight distribution and heat- and moisture-dissipating qualities of the Pellicle material on the chair's seat and back.
- Field studies using a specially designed measuring device examined the relationship between sizes of people and their preference for chair size (Dowell 1995b). Measurements of 224 people—in a sample that was evenly distributed between men and women and that closely reflected the distribution of the U.S. population on most dimensions—found that of all the anthropometric dimensions measured, height and weight had the strongest relationship to chair size preference. The relationship is strong enough to allow us to recommend one of the three chair sizes based on those dimensions.
About HERMAN MILLER
資料來源:
- ppaper 雜誌 第80期 p34-p54 2008/12/1出版
- HERMAN MILLER 官網 http://www.hermanmiller.com/Products/Aeron-Chairs
- 25togo Design Store http://www.25togo.com/store/Product.aspx?pc_kind=Brands&pc_id=00002&prod_id=0000289
- 雅浩家具http://www.yaho.com.tw/ergonomic_main_06.html