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3 Days of Design

Recaps, takeaways, learnings
Programa
Programa
Updated: 17 June 2025

Day 1: Materials, Process and Personality at 3 Days of Design

We began our first day at 3 Days of Design at the Designmuseum Danmark, joining a conversation with Spacon & X, who discussed their exploration of materials borrowed from outside the traditional design canon.

Their conversation explores materials like recycled HDPE plastic and seaweed-based boards from Søuld, which were paired with stained timber and mycelium-filled cushions. This showcases not only material innovation but also a strong commitment to local partnerships. It’s an exhibition that speaks to playfulness, contrast, and collaboration.

From there, we visited FLOS, where a strong showing of works by Michael Anastassiades, Ronan Bouroullec, Tobia Scarpa and Konstantin Grcic framed the studio’s evolving language of form and illumination.

At USM's 60th anniversary launch, a new soft panel was introduced, bringing texture and modularity into the language of their iconic metal system. It was a subtle yet bold new design element.

Inside Frederiksgade 1, Kristina Dam unveiled her full 2025 collection, a continued homage to Japanese restraint and Nordic practicality.

We stepped into Adorno’s “PERSONA”, a compelling exhibition exploring identity through design. Set across three immersive rooms—The Romantic, The Perfectionist and The Eccentric—it invited visitors to move through moods and material landscapes with scent, sound, and light.

On Bredgade, we caught up with local and visiting designers at nau, hosted by Galerie Mikael Andersen and CULT - a great way to see their latest pieces in context, and connect with the Australian design community abroad.

Later, New Works marked its 10th year at the festival by transforming its residence into a quiet, tactile boutique hotel in collaboration with Lotta Agaton Interiors. The new Kantarell Pendant Lamp Ø55 was a standout - softly sculptural and atmospherically precise.

We ended the day with a panel hosted by ArchDaily and Holder. The panel brought together Latin American voices, including David BasultoMatteo FogaleRodrigo Bravo, and Alexandra Arias. The discussion bridged architecture and identity, food and memory, anchored in reflections on MoMA’s “Crafting Modernity” exhibition.

A final stop at Kvadrat’s Frequency installation, suspended above the water, offered a sensory close to the day. From curtain textiles to rugs, the collection explored the rhythms of light, sound, and motion in woven form.

More from Copenhagen to come.

Day 1 Takeaway

Materials carry meaning - whether borrowed, broken, local, or reimagined. What we specify isn’t just functional; it shapes the atmosphere, identity, and emotion of a space. Thoughtful design starts with what we choose to work with.
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Exploring Material Stories at 3 Days of Design: Day 1 Highlights

Copenhagen’s 3 Days of Design opened with a clear message: materials aren’t just surfaces—they tell stories.

Starting at Designmuseum Danmark, Spacon & X presented a body of work built around materials imported from other industries. From aerated concrete to seaweed composites and recycled HDPE, their exhibition explored contrast—between industrial weight and museum polish, between raw tactility and refined detailing.

Throughout the city, studios and brands continued that conversation. At Kvadrat, the Frequency collection explored universal phenomena—rhythm, motion, colour—translated into textiles and rugs. Kristina Dam’s new 2025 collection brought a precise balance of Japanese restraint and Nordic practicality, while New Works marked its tenth anniversary by transforming their Residence into a calm, considered hotel space.

At Adorno’s PERSONA, identity and mood took centre stage. Three immersive rooms mapped the emotional life of design through scent, light and space—The Romantic, The Perfectionist, and The Eccentric—each revealing how designers build atmosphere with more than just furniture.

Elsewhere, global collaboration stood out. A conversation hosted by ArchDaily brought together Latin American designers Matteo Fogale, Rodrigo Bravo, and Alexandra Arias, with founder David Basulto, to reflect on craft, culture, and the contemporary relevance of MoMA’s Crafting Modernity.

From material experiments to mood-driven spatial narratives, Day 1 confirmed that designers are reaching beyond trend, searching instead for clarity, character and substance in how spaces are made.

Takeaway:
Design is not just visual. It’s structural, emotional, and deeply material. And every material choice is an opportunity to say something meaningful.