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Four Square Chair

Four Square Chair
The Four Square Chair is a made from 2" strips of 3/4", furniture-grade birch plywood; pine dowels; cast aluminum; and pool noodles. I call it the Four Square Chair because of a mathematical game I played with the design: the four planes described by the front legs, back legs, seat, and back are all squares, sixteen inches to a side. These are the four squares. There are sixteen pieces of plywood in the frame; four squared is sixteen. These are the other four squares. The angle of the front legs, back legs, and seat back off the vertical are all the same, adding another level of symmetry to the design.

Each tubular cushion is a foam pool noodle, wrapped in black cotton, with a dowel running through the center. The plywood has been drilled to accommodate the dowels and hold the cushions in place. Each piece of plywood is a 1/2" from its twin, making the total breadth of each plywood assembly 2"; since the strips are 2" across as well, each of the eight plywood sides is two inches square in cross-section -- another set of squares.

The joints are cast aluminum, made using the lost styrofoam process. I know most people don't have access to a foundry, and getting custom work cast is expensive. However, the joints could just as easily be made out of wood, hopefully something that provides a nice contrast to the plywood.

This particular project doesn't hew too close to my "readymade" ethos, in that it is not made totally from recycled junk, and I spent some money on it. That being said, the plywood was leftover from another project, the pool noodles were leftover from a party, the fabric came from a thrift store, and the aluminum is recycled. Making a chair out of relatively small pieces means that you can usually make it with scrap.

All photographs by Alfonso Elia.
 
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Step 1Drawings

Drawings
After many drafts, trying to get the proportions and angles right while still staying within my sixteen-inch rule, I came up with these drawings. I made the joint drawings full-size, the photocopied them, spray-mounted them to rigid styrofoam insulation, and cut out the shapes with a bandsaw. I made them slightly big because the casting process isn't super-accurate and I left a margin to machine down later. As in my other posts, you can print these drawings, then measure one of the pieces of plywood in the side view drawing. Since you know that has to be sixteen inches, divide it out to get a scale. As for the joints, the "legs" or parts with the holes in them, are two and half inches long by two inches.
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22 comments
May 18, 2011. 6:56 AMpleszmc says:
and also how much did it cost in total?
May 18, 2011. 6:56 AMpleszmc says:
how long did it take you to make it?
Apr 29, 2010. 11:59 AMurbanwoodswalker says:
How comfortable is sitting on the noodles? I am looking to create a much better seating situation in my studio...where I spend hours glued to my chair.
Jun 14, 2009. 9:54 PMtheRIAA says:
sigh Why did I not accept that giant 4"x8"x20" aluminum block my old high school teacher offered me before he threw it away. I will always regret that. :P

I love this! 5 stars! do the pool noodles hold up over time? I guess if one ripped you could just cut a new one down the edge like foam pipe insulation and glue it.
Jul 11, 2008. 9:07 AMpicbuck says:
Wow! Good looking and very clever. I expect some furniture manufacturer to rip off your design. (sue!)
Jul 10, 2008. 9:26 PMbarrywilliams says:
Well, I don't get the point of going to all the trouble to cast the brackets then clean them up. Aluminum plate would have accomplished the same thing. If you wanted a pitted look, a bit of acid as an etchant would have done the trick. However, I envy you for having the skills required to do aluminum casting. Second observation: the dowels used as rails are vulnerable to being broken. The first time I place a foot on it, which I will surely do, it will break. And, the unconventional placement is just unconventional. It is not useful. A conventional layout would have looked better and would be more functional. All of that said, kudos for the effort and the great deal of work that it took.
Jul 10, 2008. 2:50 PMRuettiger says:
FWIW There is a specific percentage of shrinkage of aluminum that can be used when casting. I forget the figure but I am sure google could help out those wishing to cast these.
Jul 10, 2008. 2:32 PMoceannavagator says:
Nice Idea! I would make the aluminum parts from 3/4 plate and do the dowels from aluminum pipe. I might even try a sling seat with pipe only on the front and back. This seat could be highly marketable with a little refinement. Very "Industral Looking" Good Job!
Jul 10, 2008. 2:13 PMRuettiger says:
I like it and I like the effort you went to to maintain symmetry. I think it would look realy cool in a dark cherry stain with the cast brackets/joints polished. What did it cost to cast the joints?
Jul 9, 2008. 7:34 PMtechnick29 says:
This is a really well done project. Great design and follow through.
Jul 9, 2008. 3:29 AMbeerboyone says:
Great looking chair. What made you decide to put the spreader dowels at the front and back instad of the sides?
Jul 9, 2008. 10:23 AMKiteman says:
Look at the way they join the legs - fixing the dowels this way round just needed holes in the legs; fixing them the standard direction would have required more custom-cast fittings.
Jul 9, 2008. 10:06 AMmycroftxxx says:
The chair reminds me of something out of Nomadic Furniture, very nice.
Jul 8, 2008. 8:38 PMBOXHARD says:
hahaha... MUST have been an architecture project... My older brother is an architect and I remember helping him build some crazy stuff when he was in school. Over all, very nice project though. I like how you cast the braces rather than cutting them from sheet stock.
Jul 8, 2008. 4:21 PMtimbudtwo says:
These guys tend to get destroyed out in the sun, so perhaps when these guys wear out, you can have a jig of some sort where you can cut them to size, then just slice them down the center so you can slip them over the dowels when/if these guys start flaking up. Really neat design. It looks homemade, but then it has that modern design flair to it. Cool
Jul 8, 2008. 5:53 PMStrangeRover says:
Which 'guys'? the chairs?
Jul 8, 2008. 6:54 PMtimbudtwo says:
Haha, i was not very descriptive. The fun/pool noodle deals tend to break down in the sun. It might be helpful to have them be replaceable.
Jul 8, 2008. 2:32 PMshooby says:
Nice line-weights on the elevation, and pretty cool design. Where do you go to school?
Jul 8, 2008. 1:21 PMgmoon says:
Really nice project--and very informative about the process, too. Thanks! Love the "pool noodles.." It even looks comfortable.
Jul 8, 2008. 11:04 AMLinuxH4x0r says:
Very nice! Looks really sturdy

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Author:wholman
I am an artist, writer, and designer who graduated with a degree in architecture in 2007.