A New Kind of Endurance in a Throwaway World

If most furniture is designed to be forgotten long before it ever fails, what would it look like if it were built to outlast centuries of use and change?

That is the quiet question behind Columns, a new piece from Joe Doucet in collaboration with Bulgarian design studio Oublier.

Rather than chasing novelty or novelty materials, this furniture is meant to last hundreds, and hundreds, and hundreds of years.

With solid oak, natural leather, and horsehair at its core, Columns rejects the hype cycle that defines so much design today.

These are materials not chosen for their trendiness but for the way they deepen and take on character through use. The bench looks as if it could anchor a room for generations, gaining nuance from weather, light, touch, and memory.  

There is a conceptual shift at work here. Many conversations about sustainability revolve around breaking things down, recycling them, or substituting new alternatives.

Columns invites us to look in the opposite direction. What if sustainability could be reframed not through disappearance but through endurance. Through objects that are so thoughtfully made that they never need to be replaced?  

In our culture that prizes the new and the now, this minimalist bench stands quietly in favor of time.

It respects craft without fetishizing nostalgia. It insists that real sustainability is not a checklist of eco claims but a willingness to invest in objects that can live with us, and through us, for lifetimes.

Columns is not a statement about what design should be. It is an invitation to rethink what it could be.

See more on Joe Doucet’s website. Used with artist’s permission.

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