Home Lifestyle Interior Digest Martin Binder designs seesaw bench to encourage "more playfulness and less polarisation"
Interior Digest

Martin Binder designs seesaw bench to encourage "more playfulness and less polarisation"

Martin Binder designs seesaw bench to encourage "more playfulness and less polarisation" thumbnail

Balance Bench by Martin Bender

Berlin-based artist Martin Binder has installed the Balance Bench in Einbeck, Germany, which acts like a seesaw.

Made of oak slats on a galvanised steel frame, the bench was designed to rock back and forth like a seesaw, requiring users to work together to find the equilibrium.

Balance Bench by Martin Bender
The Balance Bench was made from galvanised steel

“The idea behind the Balance Bench was to create an object in public space which fosters communication instead of creating barriers”.

“I observed that seating in public spaces is not meant to provoke interaction but rather to create distance,” Binder told Dezeen.

Balance Bench by Martin Bender
The bench is located in Einbeck

To ensure long-term durability, the bench was made from rust-resistant galvanised steel and locally sourced oak wood.

“The slats are 4.5 metres long and very thick, so they don’t curve under weather exposure and fulfil a static function,” said Binder.

“The wood is framed by steel but peeks out by a few millimetres so that on hot or cold days there is no direct contact between the legs, back and the metal.”

People balancing on bench
It is mounted on a central cylindrical support

Binder developed the concept during the Covid-19 pandemic, when he was invited to design a temporary installation for an art festival and wanted to reflect the idea of social distancing.

“I wanted to create a usable sculpture which embodied social distancing, which resulted in the balance bench: a public bench which only works with a certain distance between two people and yet only works when at least two people use it together,” Binder explained.

To accommodate various weights, the bench features a ball-bearing-like mechanism with a brake disc and rubber buffers, allowing for smooth, intuitive movement.

For safety, Binder designed a mechanism that stops the bench from touching the ground whilst keeping it visibly appealing.

Seating in German park by Martin Binder
The seesaw bench was constructed from oak and steel

Other benches featured on Dezeen included limestone sculptural benches created by Najla El Zein and a collection of steel ring-shaped benches by Thom Fougere.

The photography is by Spieker Fotografie.

The post Martin Binder designs seesaw bench to encourage “more playfulness and less polarisation” appeared first on Dezeen.

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