
Cosmic Lego for Grown-Ups
There’s a delightful, toy-like spirit to this new modular furniture concept by designers Sihun Lim and Hyeonggyun Han. Called PLA, it’s less a single chair and more a tiny furniture universe built around one simple idea: a spherical connector that lets you snap different parts together like building blocks.

From that glossy sphere, legs, seats, and supports radiate outward, forming three distinct pieces: a low stool, a lounge chair, and a sunbed. Same core, totally different silhouettes.

One Sphere, Three Orbits
The designers lean hard into a space theme, and it works beautifully. Each configuration feels like it’s in its own orbit:

O1-P – a compact stool that echoes a lunar lander, with four spindly legs that look ready to touch down on a dusty surface.
O2-A – a chair inspired by Saturn’s rings, its looping curves wrapping around the central sphere in soft, sweeping arcs.
O3-L – a stretched sunbed that resembles a satellite, with flat panels branching out like solar arrays from the core.
Viewed from above, they really do feel like orbital machines frozen mid-mission.

Retro-Future Color Play
PLA’s palette makes the forms even more playful. Lim and Han pair electric blues, coral pinks, and sharp lime greens with exposed silver tubing, landing somewhere between retro sci-fi and contemporary gallery furniture.

It’s easy to imagine these pieces living in a sunlit studio, a spacecraft lounge, or a bold, color-forward apartment. They’re designed not to disappear into the background, but to spark conversation.

Modularity as Quiet Sustainability
Beneath the whimsical space story is a quietly serious idea: furniture that can evolve instead of being thrown away. Because the designs are built from repeatable modules around that central sphere, individual parts could be swapped, repaired, or reimagined over time.

In a world of flat-pack pieces that head to the landfill when one leg fails, PLA suggests a different path: tweak, rebuild, remix.

A Tiny Universe of Possibilities
For now, PLA exists as a concept, not a product. But it reads like a friendly provocation to furniture design: what if our chairs behaved more like creative kits than static objects?
With its orbiting components and joyful color, PLA feels like a reminder that even everyday objects—a place to sit, a place to lounge—can invite us to play, imagine, and reconfigure our surroundings as our lives change.







Designers: Sihun Lim, Hyeonggyun Han
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