Porro
Endless Shelf Bookshelf
Endless Shelf is born from the creative talent of Werner Aisslinger, who designed for Porro an essential element for the home. This modular bookcase is capable of adapting to different spatial needs and to any environment, both in terms of style and aesthetics. The composable structure offers remarkable flexibility, expanding or reducing as desired while expressing its character through the wide range of finishes offered by Porro. The panels are made from solid wood slats in various essences, glued together to form a single board with a deep color and a smooth, silky surface. Ideal for living areas, it can also fit naturally into any other space in the home or even in public settings, where an elegant and distinctive presence is desired.
Modular bookshelf available in several sizes and compositions
Salvioni Design Solutions delivers all around the world. The assembly service is also available by our teams of specialized workers.
Each product is tailor-made for the personal taste and indications of the customer in a customized finish and that is why the production time may vary according to the chosen product.
To discover the full range of services available, visit our delivery page.
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The company, founded in 1925, today adopts a furnishing philosophy that integrates the traditional craftsmanship of the past with the most advanced modern production technologies. Thanks to the continuous research on materials, Porro is a brand capable of anticipating, year after year, formal, stylistic and technical trends. Born in the cultural epicenter of the interior design furniture production, Porro preserves and promotes its own precious corporate patrimony made of a wide selection of traditional essences and knowledge such as carving, inlay, curved wood that coexist with cutting-edge processing techniques, some of which are patented, at the service of the project customized Porro.Read more
Designed by
Werner Aisslinger
Werner Aisslinger (1964-) is one of the great protagonists of 90s design. He founded his studio in Berlin in 1993, after his formative years as a youth, during which he worked in London for Jasper Morrison and Ron Arad and in Milan for Michele De Lucchi. In the very first years of his career, collaborations with important Italian companies immediately opened the doors to success: in 1996 he designed the Endless Shelf modular bookcase system for Porro, destined to become a great bestseller and win numerous awards, while in 1997 the Juli chair designed for Cappellini became the first seat signed by a German designer to be selected in the permanent collection of the MoMA in New York after over thirty years. A more conceptual project dates back to 2003, but it was capable of attracting great attention and interest: the Loftcube mobile living system, exhibited in various prototypes on the roofs of Berlin. In the following years he continued his activity alongside both large Italian brands (such as Moroso and, in the past, Magis and Zanotta) and those from the Swiss and German areas (including Dedon, De Sede, Thonet and Kaldewei).Read more






