
Pontos Architectural Structure
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Product Name
Pontos Architectural Structure
Product Description
Wood takes many forms and shapes. Pontos Architectural Structure explores its capacity for transformation.
Conceived as a wall-anchored architectural element, the piece transitions from a solid wooden surface into a reflective plane as it reaches the wall. The material appears to dissolve, evoking the presence of water through a controlled shift in surface and perception.
This transformation is achieved through precise fabrication and careful finishing, allowing solidity and reflection to coexist. Pontos operates between furniture and architecture, anchoring the wall while extending into the room as a spatial intervention rather than a conventional table.
Materials: solid wood, mirror, metal
Production: made to order
Use: residential interiors, architectural spaces, galleries
Product Dimensions: 1000x700x2000 mm
SKU: INS-PC-01
Collaboration Breeds Success
A Design By Cezar Moldovan x Arbore.
"This collection is the result of my collaboration with Arbore, born from a simple but persistent observation: architecture is everywhere.
We move through porticos, rest against columns and inhabit structural spaces every day, often without noticing them. I wanted to bring these elements closer, translating architectural forms into an intimate, domestic scale — allowing bold structures to become movable, usable and part of everyday life.
In this work, texture takes precedence over color. Each object is shaped by the way light meets its surface and by how the hand understands material through touch. Visual perception and tactile experience exist together, revealing warmth and coolness, roughness and refinement, mass and lightness.
Traditional carpentry intersects with contemporary digital fabrication. Hand-finished surfaces coexist with machine-carved precision, allowing craft and technology to converge. The result is a series of objects where architectural presence is no longer monumental or distant, but integrated into the daily ritual of living."
Cezar Moldovan

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