Beautiful Legacy
In this episode of Beautiful Legacy, we look at the Frankfurt Kitchen, designed in 1926 by Austrian architect Margarete Schütte-Lihotzky. Created for a social housing project in Frankfurt, this small, narrow kitchen was not designed as decoration or domestic comfort in the traditional sense. It was designed as a system. Schütte-Lihotzky studied movement, reach, storage, hygiene, workflow and time, applying the logic of industrial efficiency to the everyday act of cooking. The result was one of the first modern fitted kitchens - compact, precise and deeply functional. But its legacy is not simple. The Frankfurt Kitchen made domestic labour visible, measurable and worthy of design attention. At the same time, it also reveals the contradictions of efficiency: who is the system designed for, who performs the labour, and what kind of life does the system reinforce? From fitted cabinets to modular kitchens, from ergonomic planning to user-centred design, the Frankfurt Kitchen shaped far more than domestic architecture. It introduced a way of thinking that still defines how we design homes, services, retail spaces and everyday flows.
51 episodios
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