
City Fragments: A Series of Sculptural End Tables
There’s a rhythm to New York—a skyline shaped by stories, steel, and silhouettes. It’s a place our studio returns to, again and again, for inspiration and communion. Out of one such visit grew an idea: what if the icons of a city became vessels for daily life?
Crafted from layered plywood, these end tables are more than furniture. They are architectural relics in miniature—quiet homages to grandeur. The Empire State Building rises in profile, a vertical gesture frozen in grain. The Brooklyn Bridge stretches its gothic arches across another, its span reimagined in function. The third captures the sweep of the Washington Square Arch, a familiar portal now carved in negative space.
Each piece supports the ordinary—lamps, clocks, coffee cups—while hiding practical shelving within its sides. Books, electronics, or quiet keepsakes find a home here, embedded in the city’s silhouette.
These are end tables with memory. Monuments you can touch.