


The red sofa, the master piece winner of Danmarks næste klassiker — it’s a statement. A piece shaped by stories of reuse, collaboration, and bold climate communication, it brings together design integrity with a clear environmental purpose.
Crafted almost entirely from recycled materials, the sofa reimagines what sustainable furniture can be. Former office desktops form the structure, while leftover padding from carpet production and Re-Wool fabric made from recycled wool complete the build. Every component carries a trace of its former life — no compromise on quality, but a conscious shift in narrative.
The design draws from Bauhaus principles: functional clarity, reduced form, and honest materials. But it also takes a leap — choosing a vibrant red tone to challenge the visual language of sustainability. This isn’t beige or understated. It’s direct, vivid, and meant to start conversations.
Developed in collaboration with Holmris B8 and their Recrafted initiative, the sofa embodies a real-world commitment to circular design. It’s not a prototype for the shelf — it’s a scalable solution, built with the ambition of changing how the furniture industry sources, produces, and rethinks waste.
More than just a “masterpiece,” the sofa became a personal milestone. A design anchored in climate communication, it reflects the journey of turning concern into action — and action into a tangible object that invites pause, dialogue, and change.