Annual design fair shows that home is more than where you sleep: More people are using living spaces to express their interests, personality
This year’s edition of the Seoul Living Design Fair featured 366 brands from across the world, including global heavyweights such as Fritz Hansen and LG alongside local appliance makers and rising designers. A record 286,000 visitors dropped by this year’s event over its five-day run.
Visitors had plenty of attractions and interactive activities to visit and get the most out of their time there.
Rows of delightfully-furnished rooms and furniture layouts offered inspiration to visitors planning a spring makeover. Several modular furniture makers, including Switzerland’s USM, came to offer a taste of their highly flexible and intricately-engineered pieces, which often come in blocks that can be taken down and assembled according to room size and requirement.
The Seoul Living Design Fair’s theme this year was “Making a happy home,” which, according to organizers, touches on the growing interest in making one’s home suitable for activities beyond just sleeping.
“There’s been a growing number of ‘Home Ludens,’ or people seeking happiness at home,” read an official statement from the Fair, organized by Coex and Design House, Korea’s top publisher of design-related magazines.
“Millennials are now transforming homes to suit their taste, making them optimal for personal hobbies, house parties, pets and plants.”
Small Stuff, a brand specializing in pet-specific furniture, showed off its pastel-hued dog stairs at their booth. This rising must-have accessory for pet owners is intended to “prevent kneecap dislocation in pets,” according to the company, allowing dogs and cats to climb up to the sofa instead of needing to jump.
Howlpot, another household name among Korean dog-lovers, displayed an array of cozy dog seats and cute toys shaped in the form of instant noodles and gimbap (seaweed rice rolls).
The impressive number of electric massagers - for the neck, hands, feet and more - served as a reminder that the home, among other functions, should serve as a place of rest.
One eye-catching area of the fair was health product manufacturer Factorial’s booth, where dozens of visitors stretched out and made themselves right at home on a long row of bunk beds in the middle of the crowded hall.
The beds all had heated, massage-equipped mattresses, which, according to the staff at Factorial, have the effect of not only inducing deep and satisfactory sleep but of also loosening back muscles that have become tight from sitting in front of a computer for hours. The 20-minute trial sessions were enough to allow visitors to take small naps.
More ambitious visitors paid an additional fee to hear insightful talks on the topic of “The Future of Urban Living” from eight industry experts who graced the stage for a two-day “Living Trend Seminar” series on Thursday and Friday. Among notable speakers were USM CEO Alexander Schaerer and MINI Living’s Oke Hauser, an architect whose designs respond to the scarcity of living space in the city. Both of their works were prominently displayed in the exhibition.
BY KIM EUN-JIN [kim.eunjin1@joongang.co.kr]
with the Korea JoongAng Daily
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