Peer Table

Summary

Peer Tables accommodate the increase in communal, multi-use workspaces at the office. The design encourages more casual styles of meeting, conversation, and co-creation that take place in collaborative settings. A shelf below the table surface provides convenient under-table power and data access. It also allows collaborators to keep phones and laptops close by while maximizing available tabletop space.

Freestanding
Depth: 20″, 36″, 40″
Width: 72″, 96″, 120″
Height: 30″, 41 ¹⁄₂”

Product story

Taking note of increasingly flexible and communal workspaces, Lucy Aiken-Johnson and Patrick Johnson of ai3 created Peer Tables to accommodate informal meetings and conversations in group areas. Integrated power and data access were givens.

AI3

Patrick Johnson, Joe Remling, Dan Maas, and Lucy Aiken-Johnson combined their talents in 2004 to form ai3, a design consultancy grounded in architecture, interiors, and product development. The firm’s collaborative, multidisciplinary approach—an exchange of ideas among designers, architects, artists, and other creative thinkers—leads to designs that tell compelling stories in public and community spaces.

Their work can be seen in the LEED-certified Tandus Design Center in Atlanta, Top Chef Richard Blais’ FLIP restaurants, and American Apparel’s two Atlanta locations, among other projects. ai3 has designed multiple collections for Pallas Textiles, including the award-winning Common Ground in 2007.

Designs for Geiger include the iconic Peer Table, an architecturally inspired setting for touchdown meetings in open work environments, and 2 by 3, a three-legged stool sculpted of just seven solid wood components, joined by a concealed mortise and tenon, that highlights the material’s natural beauty and versatility.

Peer Table

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