Bamboo Bench by Gal Ben-Arav
Israeli designer Gal Ben-Arav has created a bench using raw bamboo and cast aluminum.
The bench was created as a final project at Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design in Jerusalem.

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Description of the Bamboo Bench from Gal Ben-Arav:
Sustainable is a wide concept. I chose to deal with it in the context of raw material, living environment, localism, and sustainable system.
The bamboo plant is renewed very quickly, therefore energetically efficient, with high mechanical strength and durability to weather conditions. Bamboo has wide range of configurations as a raw material, from its raw form, through compressed plates to veneer processing.
I chose to use bamboo in its raw form. In this way, the processing is minimal as well as the invested energy, it can be 100% recycled and the out coming morphology creates a new micro-wild natural environment that can be situated in an urban, industrial and gray environment and revive it.
Bamboo bench has two narratives:
My Inspiration to the bench lies in an image that was taken from the 30′s from my childhood landscapes with two workers leading bundles of papyrus through a swamp (see below). This photograph personally connected me to the bench and guided me to the wild morphology of the design.The second narrative is the narrative of the product life cycle. Bamboo is not a characteristic species to the Middle East, but its origins are in Asia, however today it is grown in a controlled manner here in Israel. In my vision such a bench reflects a complete system that maintains itself through a life cycle that is built on three repeated main stages that preserve the sustainability values in a full manner:
- Growing bamboo – Establishment of a new agricultural industry, creating new economic opportunities, new sources of income and making the bamboo a local material that saves the need to import.
- Building a bench that integrates in the surrounding living environment in an energy-efficient manufacturing process.
- Recycling the raw material following weathering processes or vandalism that occurs frequently to street furniture. Used bamboo can be recycled to produce packaging or for many other purposes.
Through the design process, I tried to keep the materialism of the bamboo, its natural morphology, its simplicity, but on the other hand, to create a conflict and tension between the natural bamboos to the industrial aluminum casting.
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Bahay Kubo on 29 Jan 2011 at 1:11 am #
this is innovation.
Great on 29 Jan 2011 at 11:31 am #
the splinters make me cringe
hZ! on 29 Jan 2011 at 9:08 pm #
Dogs will be poked in the eye. This is a great idea and should be taken up by municipal authorities for public seating [so much is made of totally unsuitable durable but heat conductive material], but the ends need to be chainsawed to evenness. Dead cheap, correct specific heat, comfortable, easy to repair quickly when worn or damaged.
nanzcode on 31 Jan 2011 at 2:47 am #
this is a unique creation. but it needs material comfort to everyone.we have to think and consider.
Ricardo de A on 31 Jan 2011 at 10:40 am #
You can’t roll skate on them :/
shane on 31 Jan 2011 at 1:19 pm #
I think not. Make a bench out of conventional materials & do it right & it should last decades. This will require more maintainance than it’s worth & it looks like garbage
Phil Julian on 03 Feb 2011 at 2:00 pm #
Siting on the ground would be more comfortable than that. Other than to spark ideas or generate discussion, how is this considered good design that is worthy of featuring here??
Erin on 03 Feb 2011 at 9:28 pm #
Most of the time when we feature furniture, it is often a refined production piece that is all about comfort and aesthetics. Sometimes we get critised for focusing too much on designers that create things for money versus designing things that contribute to improving the world. Occasionally we get to feature something different from that and this is one of those times.
This time we have a student who was given a task and he completed that task to the best of his ability. To say that you would rather sit on the ground than on a seat is going a bit far…yes, it may not be amazingly comfortable but that isn’t what he was focused on, he was focused on creating a sustainable piece of furniture. If I was walking down the road and it was a seating option I would sit on it.
Sometimes we need to look at the bigger picture and realise that this is a piece of furniture created by a student designer that is just starting out. We consider this good design as this is someone thinking about doing things in a more sustainable and environmentally friendly way.
Let’s not get on the negativity band-wagon for a young designer that is just starting out…maybe this guy will go on to create even more beautiful things and become a leader in environmentally sensitive furniture design. Instead of discouraging a young designer, maybe we should get behind him and offer suggestions or solutions to improve his product. If you think it would be uncomfortable, why not suggest a better 100% renewable material that complies with his challenge.
nanzcode on 09 Feb 2011 at 4:58 am #
designing things is not easy, specially in furniture.as designer has to consider all angles and totality is beauty. and make money.this student designer need exposure a mile away.
Anaïs on 15 Feb 2011 at 1:52 am #
Hi,
Could you tell me when this amazing creation was made?
Thanks!
Jason Stevens on 21 Feb 2011 at 2:48 pm #
I want one – now! Where can I buy?!?!