Teak turns silver in its second summer. Rope holds its weave through a decade of sun. Steel wears a coat thick enough to forget the rain exists. This is the material logic behind the strongest outdoor pieces of the season, objects built with the patience of furniture meant to last rather than the urgency of furniture meant to survive.
Snøhetta’s Array Outdoor for MDF Italia treats a terrace the way it treats a landscape, its hollow injection-moulded base built from recycled polypropylene and designed for disassembly and repair rather than replacement, a circularity that earned the piece the Compasso d’Oro.

Vincent Van Duysen’s Alizé for Kettal pulls the opposite instinct, its rotational-moulded volumes softening into what the brand calls coastal modernity, a chair built for stillness rather than statement.

Giampiero Tagliaferri’s Orion Outdoor for Minotti carries the architectural weight of interior seating into open air, its suspended steel feet and matching travertine tables proof that a strong hand does not soften once it steps outside.

Elsewhere, craft takes the lead. Luca Nichetto’s Oleia for Ethimo reworks hand-woven rope into something closer to couture, a structure the designer himself calls transparent upholstery.

Andrea Steidl’s Egadi for Unopiù translates the memory of a salt-cracked dock into glazed Fiberstone, two geometries meeting in a single sculptural form.

Yabu Pushelberg’s Elio for Tribù borrows its name from Helios, the Greek sun god, its teak frame and hand-woven Tricord rope built to hold a body the way a cocoon holds anything worth protecting.

Colombo appears twice this season, a rare case of one designer’s language repeating itself without ever sounding repetitive. Where Giorgetti’s Moorea builds its logic around steel and a yacht’s memory, his Itaca collection for Talenti works in the opposite register: sun-bleached volumes, low horizontal lines, and a restraint in form that reads less like a nautical reference and more like an argument for how little an outdoor chair actually needs to say.


Roche Bobois keeps Temps Calme in-house, its round modular form as at home outdoors as it has always been within four walls.

Gommaire’s Mieke, part of the Organic Living collection, pairs grey natural teak with sand-toned wicker, no signature attached beyond the brand’s own.

Business and Pleasure’s Contini borrows instead from British colonial elegance, its wide stripes doing the work a designer’s name might otherwise do.

One piece here breaks its own rules entirely. Yves Salomon Éditions × Michael Bargo remains, technically, an indoor object, born from an installation at Milan Design Week where vintage American rattan was reupholstered in fur inside a preserved 1960s apartment. Its presence in this edit is a deliberate exception. Some pieces earn a place in any conversation about the season regardless of where they are meant to sit.

Outdoor furniture has always occupied an uneasy category in design history, treated by manufacturers as a technical problem and by critics as a minor one. What this season’s strongest work suggests is that the constraint itself, engineering an object to survive UV degradation, saline corrosion, and repeated hydration cycles, has become a legitimate design language rather than an obstacle to one.




