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Move over, IKEA: New ‘smart foam’ furniture can build itself

Carl de Smet self-assembled foam furniture
Image used with permission by copyright holder

You can marvel at different pieces of furniture in the IKEA showroom all you want, but at the end of the day, you’re still an allen wrench and several hours away from a fully furnished apartment. That’s why we’re loving designer and engineer Carl de Smet’s smart foam furniture which can assemble itself without any muscle power.

The lightweight furniture are made with “shape memory” polyurethane foam that can be flat-packed down to five percent of its original size. When the piece is ready for assembly, simply apply heat and the foam will expand to its full size. Thanks to this shape memory property, the furnitures can also be repacked, transported, and rebuilt to make moving easier. If the furniture gets damaged, it can also be re-expanded to fill in any spots bent out of shape. At the moment, de Smet designed the funky, futuristic pieces to unfold when surrounded by temperatures above 70 degrees. However, just in case the weather gets unusually warm, he’s also experimenting with expansion by electrical current to avoid summer mishaps.

Carl de Smet foam furnitureThe shape memory furniture is a byproduct of de Smet’s recent research in designing a compact parabolic antenna to be used in outer space. The Belgian designer says he was exploring ways to build a flat-packed antenna that would be easy to fit into a spaceship and expand when exposed to the sun’s rays. However, that design utilizes expensive metal-based alloys which would make real life applications impossible to sell.

“I wanted to bring it back to daily life and not only use it for high technology projects, and for that the metals were too expensive,” de Smet told Dezeen. “With polymers, when you produce them in large quantities, it’s affordable.”

De Smet will unveil scaled-down models of this technology tomorrow during Milan Design Week, though he promises he is close to implementing these structural effect in full-sized furniture. While you may be tempted to put in an order right away, be patient; de Smet estimates that his designs will be commercially available in the next 18 months.

Watch the video below to see a demonstration of how the smart foam chair can assemble itself in under five minutes.

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Natt Garun
Former Digital Trends Contributor
An avid gadgets and Internet culture enthusiast, Natt Garun spends her days bringing you the funniest, coolest, and strangest…
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