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King Living’s Triple Red Dot Win: When Australian Furniture Design Goes Global

When was the last time you got excited about sitting down? I mean, genuinely thrilled about the act of planting yourself on a piece of furniture? If you’re drawing a blank, you haven’t experienced what happens when Australian design thinking meets five decades of furniture engineering. King Living just scored a hat trick at the 2025 Red Dot Design Awards, and these aren’t your average living room pieces. We’re talking about furniture that transforms at your touch, adapts to your body like it’s reading your mind, and somehow manages to look at home in both a modernist gallery and your Netflix binge-watching sessions.

The Sydney-based furniture maker walked away with three prestigious Red Dot awards for their King Cinema Recliner, Haven Sofa, and 1978 High Back Sofa. For a company that began in 1977, crafting steel-framed furniture in Australia, this triple win represents something more significant than just another trophy for the cabinet. It’s validation that furniture can be both an engineering marvel and a design statement, that comfort doesn’t have to compromise aesthetics, and that modular design can feel anything but clinical.

The Cinema Experience That Fits in Your Living Room

Let’s start with the King Cinema Recliner, because this is where technology meets comfort in ways that would make your local movie theater jealous. The star feature here is King Living’s TouchGlide technology, which sounds like something from a sci-fi movie but is brilliantly simple. Instead of fumbling for levers or buttons like you’re operating heavy machinery, you control the headrest and footrest positions with intuitive touch gestures. The recliner responds to your movements with the kind of smooth, whisper-quiet motion that makes you wonder why all furniture doesn’t work this way.

What sets the Cinema Recliner apart from the sea of home theater seating is its ability to create a genuine cinema experience without resembling the installation of actual movie theater seats in your living room. The modular design means you can configure it for intimate two-person viewing or expand it for full family movie nights. Each seat operates independently, so while you’re fully reclined and immersed in the latest blockbuster, your partner can sit upright, scrolling through their phone (we won’t judge). The genius is in how King Living has hidden all the mechanical complexity behind clean lines and premium upholstery that wouldn’t look out of place in a high-end design showroom.

 

Haven: The Shape-Shifting Sofa That Reads Your Mood

The Haven Sofa might be the most aptly named piece of furniture I’ve encountered. This isn’t hyperbole; it’s a modular system that adapts to how you want to relax at any given moment. The hidden flex mechanisms are the real heroes here, allowing you to transform the backrest from a sleek, low-profile look to full high-back support with a simple motion. However, here’s where it gets interesting: each armrest corner adjusts independently, allowing you to create asymmetrical configurations that match exactly how you prefer to lounge.

The “cloud-like comfort” description from King Living sounds like marketing fluff until you actually experience the ultra-soft seat cushions. The engineering challenge here was to create something soft enough to feel luxurious while maintaining sufficient structure to support the flexible mechanisms. The result feels like sitting on a cloud that somehow knows exactly where you need support. As a modular design, Haven can be reconfigured and rearranged without tools, making it perfect for people who can’t commit to a single furniture layout or those who regularly host gatherings that require different seating arrangements.

1978 High Back: When Classic Design Gets a Modern Brain

The 1978 High Back Sofa is what happens when you take a successful design from the 1970s and inject it with 21st-century thinking. Building on the legacy of King Living’s original 1977 Sofa, this piece manages to feel both timeless and thoroughly contemporary. The high back design addresses one of the most common complaints about modern minimalist furniture: the lack of proper head and neck support. However, instead of simply adding a taller backrest and calling it a day, King Living reimagined the entire support system.

The real innovation lies in the balance between classic aesthetics and modern functionality. The clean lines and elegant proportions wouldn’t look out of place in a Don Draper office, but underneath that mid-century-inspired exterior beats the heart of a thoroughly modern piece of furniture. Machine-washable covers mean you can actually live on this sofa without treating it like a museum piece. The modular construction allows for multiple configurations, from intimate two-seaters to sprawling sectionals that can accommodate extended family gatherings. It’s furniture that grows with your life rather than forcing you to adapt to its limitations.

The Future of Furniture is Already Here

These Red Dot wins, along with iF Design Awards for both the 1978 High Back Sofa and their Plateau Outdoor Sofa, represent more than just another trophy haul for King Living. They signal a fundamental shift in how we think about furniture design. David King put it perfectly: “These designs are a reflection of how people live today.” The emphasis on modularity and customization across all three award-winning pieces acknowledges a simple truth: our homes now serve as offices, entertainment centers, social hubs, and personal retreats, sometimes all in the same day. Static furniture has become an obstacle rather than an asset.

What’s remarkable is how King Living has maintained its Australian design DNA while expanding across New Zealand, Singapore, Malaysia, China, Canada, the UK, and the United States. The Haven Sofa and 1978 High Back Sofa will soon join over 2,000 exhibits at the prestigious Red Dot Museum in Essen, Germany, proving that thoughtful, user-centered design transcends borders. In an era where we’re surrounded by smart technology and adaptive systems, King Living is showing that furniture can be intelligent without being complicated, adaptive without being gimmicky, and beautiful without sacrificing functionality.

The question isn’t whether other furniture makers will follow this lead. The question is how quickly they’ll catch up. Because once you’ve experienced furniture that actually responds to your needs, grows and changes with your life, and manages to look stunning while doing so, there’s really no going back to static seating. These three Red Dot winners aren’t just beautiful pieces of furniture; they’re a manifesto for what modern living should feel like.

The post King Living’s Triple Red Dot Win: When Australian Furniture Design Goes Global first appeared on Yanko Design.

The Women Reshaping Furniture Design at King Living

Female designers remain dramatically underrepresented in industrial design. The numbers tell a sobering story that cuts across continents and specialties. A mere 5% of product and industrial designers in the UK identify as women. The United States fares marginally better at 19%. Australia reports just 11% of Creative Directors in graphic design are women—statistics that highlight a persistent imbalance.

King Living is a notable example of an Australian furniture company working to address this industry-wide pattern. The company has cultivated a team where several female designers lead significant projects and shape the brand’s direction, though, like most furniture manufacturers, it likely still has progress to make toward full gender parity.

Their work represents a shift in thinking about furniture. These designers prioritize adaptability, inclusivity, and longevity in ways that traditional approaches often overlook. The result? Pieces that respond to human diversity rather than forcing users to adapt to standardized forms.

Meet the Designers

Alinta Lim is a Senior Designer at King Living. Her award-winning creation, the Issho dining table, has become one of the brand’s most celebrated dining designs and exemplifies the company’s innovative approach.

The Issho collection, whose name means “together” in Japanese, began as what Lim describes as “a form exercise,” exploring how repetitions of a singular sculpted piece could create a harmonious pedestal volume. In her own words: “Issho started out purely as a form exercise, seeing how repetitions of this singular sculpted piece could come together harmoniously to create a full pedestal volume. Or how rotating them open completely changes the feel of the table with this dynamic spatial tension between the angled pieces.”

What emerged features curved pillars that can be arranged in open or closed configurations, allowing the table to adapt to different spaces while maintaining structural integrity. The table utilizes material technology previously unused at King Living, enabling the creation of curvaceous forms with strong visual impact.

The modular nature of the design led to an organic expansion beyond the initial concept. Lim explains: “We didn’t plan to have so many pieces, but with the base pieces being modular it made a lot of sense to reconfigure it into different sizes and table shapes. The coffee and side tables were perhaps the most surprising iterations. Each base set of legs is made of a single dining leg cut in half. They ended up being some of the most unique pieces, with the shapes being so organic and imperfect in a non-symmetrical sense.”

Lim has spoken candidly about gender disparity in design. She acknowledges: “I’ve been fortunate in my career to have had both female and male mentors who have been very encouraging and led me to believe that women can excel at all levels in Design. However, it would be remiss to say gender disparity in design teams isn’t noticeable.”

She advocates strongly for diversity in design leadership, stating: “Having more female designers in leading roles, and representation for all types of people, will foster more diverse and empathetic design thinking which benefits everyone.”

For more than a decade, Tanya Rechberger has been an integral part of the King Living creative team as Senior Design Development Manager. Her skilled hand extends to almost every product category, from indoor and outdoor dining to bedroom furniture and beyond. Sofa design, however, has become her signature strength, benefiting the younger in-house designers she mentors.

Several years ago, Rechberger led the high-stakes project to iteratively improve the best-selling Jasper modular sofa. “Jasper is an iconic furniture product in Australia, so it was an honour to work on its next iteration,” she says of the beloved piece originally designed by company founder David King in 2003. The challenge was substantial. “Our brief was to improve it, add extra features and make sure that everyone still loved it. It was a very complicated process with no room for teething issues, but I loved everything about that challenge, and the result was – and is – beautiful.”

King Living Jasper II

Her knack for iterative improvement and problem-solving makes Rechberger—who holds a Bachelor of Industrial Design and a Master’s of Engineering Management from UTS in Sydney—ideal for her concurrent role as Continual Improvement Manager. “I want our products to be the best they can be. We are constantly looking at ways to improve design and manufacture of both current and past pieces,” she explains.

For Rechberger, functionality and aesthetics must work in harmony. “Comfort and quality are at the heart of the King Difference. It doesn’t matter how beautiful a piece of furniture is, if it’s not comfortable and it doesn’t last, then it’s just not going to work with your lifestyle. I could never have an uncomfortable sofa, no matter how good it looked!”

Once the only female in what has become a consciously diverse design team, she now holds the most senior designer position. Her responsibilities extend beyond design to collaborating with the engineering department on manufacturing upgrades, researching global trends, and attending key international trade shows.

The Milan Furniture Fair provides particular inspiration for her creative process. “The Milan Furniture Fair, which I love to attend each year, is amazing – so much inspiration and fresh design ideas, mixed with impeccable craftsmanship and design heritage all in one place,” she enthuses.

Design has been Rechberger’s passion since childhood. “Growing up, I was just one of those kids who liked making things. At first, I thought I wanted to be an architect…” Her path changed after discovering industrial design through her sibling’s university handbook. “Architecture is interesting, but there’s something special about the ability to physically interact with a smaller design product like furniture,” she notes.

This intimate connection between form and function drives her approach. “Making something both functional and beautiful is a difficult thing to get right – and the more you learn about furniture, the more you realise how important that functional aspect is, particularly in a country like Australia where people value laid-back looks and ease of use so much.”

Rechberger’s understanding of Australian aesthetic sensibilities informs her work. She describes this distinctive style as “a combination of relaxed, comfortable, pared back and unpretentious – but also elevated,” qualities embodied in every King design. This philosophy extends to her definition of “the King Difference”—that they “never just design ‘a product’, it’s a product plus so much more. An armchair is never just an armchair for us; we’re always searching for how it can be a better product and engage most effectively with your life.”

This commitment to excellence manifests in practical longevity. “Our products are designed for longevity from the get-go. If we are going to put our energy into making something, we want it to be as good as it can possibly be, and made so that it can change with the times and evolve with your life. Changeable furniture covers are just one example of that.”

The sustainability aspect of King Living’s approach is particularly important to Rechberger. “We want customers to keep loving their furniture for decades, not years. In fact, customers can bring back items to the service centre to have them fixed or updated. That’s the King Difference.”

Working from Sydney headquarters provides her with tangible evidence of this durability commitment. “We see the products that come into the servicing department. It’s amazing to see a 30-year-old sofa coming in and getting recovered. It’s indicative of the quality of King design.”

Her design philosophy balances contemporary trends with timeless appeal. “We are always on trend, but we also design each product to have timeless appeal. I think that approach really suits the ‘pared back’ Australian aesthetic.”

Another significant female-led design project at King Living comes from designer Zara Fong, who created the Aura Sofa. This piece exemplifies the intersection of functional furniture design and artistic expression.

Fong designed the Aura specifically for contemporary living needs, particularly for more compact spaces. Her vision transcended mere functionality—she wanted to create something that would serve as both a comfortable piece of furniture and an artistic statement.

“Aura was designed to respond to how we live today – there is a lot more compact space. We wanted Aura to be an art piece, but at the same time be comfortable and functional to suit modern day life,” Fong has explained.

Aura Collection

The Aura Sofa gained additional artistic significance through a collaboration with Indigenous artist Lizzy Stageman. The sofa was covered with fabric featuring Stageman’s “Against The Elements” artwork, creating a unique piece that merged furniture design with Indigenous art.

These talented women represent the diverse creative voices shaping King Living’s innovative design philosophy. Their work demonstrates how different perspectives enhance furniture creation, resulting in pieces that balance striking aesthetics with practical functionality—designs that evolve with changing lifestyles while maintaining their essential character and quality.

Women in Leadership Beyond Design

Women at King Living have also played crucial roles in the company’s global expansion and business leadership, providing additional context for understanding the company’s approach to gender diversity.

Rose Bernard serves as Regional Retail Manager for the UK, leading a team of 18 across three King Living showrooms. Her decade-long career with the company has spanned three countries—Australia, Canada, and the UK—where she has been instrumental in establishing King Living’s international presence.

Ili Ibrahim has been with King Living since its first global showroom opened in Singapore in 2015. Now the Country Manager in Singapore, she has overseen the expansion of the showroom from 7,500 to 13,000 square feet and played a pivotal role in King Living’s expansion into Malaysia.

These leadership roles, while not directly in product design, help create an environment where female perspectives can influence the company’s direction and priorities.

Designing for Everyone

Universal design principles guide much of King Living’s work. This approach seeks to create products accessible to people regardless of age, size, ability, or other characteristics. The philosophy extends beyond accessibility features to embrace a fundamental rethinking of how furniture can adapt to human diversity.

King Living Showroom in the United States

The concept sounds simple in theory. It proves remarkably complex in execution.

According to company materials, the King Design Studio approaches comfort as subjective: “Comfort is such a subjective and personal thing. Modular furniture affords us the flexibility to adjust and reconfigure to suit our body ergonomics, lifestyles and home environments, all of which can change and evolve over time.”

This philosophy manifests in the company’s signature sofas. The Jasper and Delta collections feature adaptable components that can be reconfigured in numerous ways. Users can rearrange, add, or remove elements as their needs change over time, creating furniture that evolves alongside their lives.

Delta Sofa can be easily removed and reconnected.

The modularity serves practical purposes beyond immediate comfort. When moving to a larger home, a sofa can transform from a standard three-seater to a sectional. All fabric and leather covers are removable thanks to discreet Velcro fixings, making cleaning and replacement straightforward. Through the King-Care® aftercare service, most cover replacements can be done directly in the customer’s home, eliminating the need to send the sofa away for recovering.

This adaptability extends beyond seating to other furniture categories. The Issho table demonstrates how dining furniture can shift between configurations to accommodate different gatherings and spaces. The base can open or close to create different visual effects while maintaining structural stability.

The approach acknowledges a fundamental truth that traditional furniture design often overlooks: people live differently in ways that change over time and vary across cultures. Families gather in culturally specific ways. Bodies have different requirements for comfort. Spaces serve multiple functions.

By designing for this diversity from the outset, King Living creates furniture with broader appeal and longevity. Their pieces adapt to changing circumstances rather than becoming obsolete when needs or preferences evolve.

However, it’s worth noting that truly universal design remains an aspiration rather than a fully realized achievement. Even the most thoughtfully designed modular systems have limitations and may not accommodate all body types or abilities equally well. The cost of such adaptable systems can also place them out of reach for many consumers, creating an accessibility barrier based on economic factors.

Sustainability Through Adaptability

King Living’s approach to sustainability focuses heavily on product longevity. Their steel frame construction provides structural integrity that outlasts typical furniture, creating a durable foundation that can support multiple iterations of the same piece over decades.

This durability combines with modular design to extend useful life. When family circumstances shift, the furniture adapts through reconfiguration rather than disposal. When aesthetic preferences evolve, components can be reupholstered or rearranged to create essentially new pieces without manufacturing entirely new frames.

The environmental benefits can be significant when considered at scale. Furniture stays in homes rather than landfills. Resources go toward updating existing pieces rather than manufacturing entirely new ones with all the associated material and energy costs.

Zaza features removable covers that can be replaced to extend its lifecycle.

This philosophy represents a shift from consumption to conservation in the furniture industry. It challenges the fashion-driven cycles that render perfectly functional furniture “outdated” after arbitrary periods.

The approach requires balancing environmental considerations with performance metrics. Sustainable furniture must still be comfortable, beautiful, and functional—a balance the company has worked to refine.

While this approach to sustainability through durability and adaptability has merit, it represents just one aspect of environmental responsibility. A comprehensive sustainability assessment would also consider manufacturing processes, material sourcing, supply chain impacts, and end-of-life recycling programs. King Living, like most furniture manufacturers, likely faces ongoing challenges in addressing all these aspects of environmental impact.

The Power of Diverse Perspectives

King Living has emphasized the value of diverse perspectives in its company materials. Under the leadership of CEO David Woollcott, who has guided the company’s international expansion efforts, King Living has worked to incorporate diverse viewpoints into its design approach. Different perspectives create furniture that responds to a wide range of needs and preferences.

The benefits extend beyond gender diversity at the company. Cultural backgrounds, ages, physical abilities, and lived experiences all contribute to a richer understanding of how furniture functions in people’s lives and how it might better serve diverse needs.

Alinta Lim

This philosophy is reflected in the company’s collaborations with designers like Alinta Lim and Zara Fong, whose distinct approaches have resulted in innovative pieces like the Issho dining collection and the Aura Sofa. Their work demonstrates how diverse perspectives can translate into furniture that balances form, function, and adaptability.

Breaking Barriers

How might companies like King Living cultivate female design talent in an industry where women remain dramatically underrepresented?

Part of the approach involves recognizing that diverse teams can create better products. This recognition would translate into hiring practices and development opportunities that support female designers throughout their careers rather than treating diversity as a superficial metric.

Companies can provide visible role models for emerging designers. Women considering design careers need to see others succeeding in the field to envision their own potential paths. Environments where women occupy leadership positions and create award-winning designs can help increase visibility.

The impact extends beyond individual companies to influence the broader design landscape. As female designers gain recognition through awards and media coverage, they increase visibility for women in furniture design broadly. Their work demonstrates that this career path remains open to women despite historical barriers and persistent underrepresentation.

King Living’s examples of Lim leading the Issho collection and Fong creating the Aura Sofa provide tangible evidence of women succeeding in furniture design. These success stories can inspire other women to pursue careers in this field.

Has the journey been smooth? Hardly. The obstacles women face in design often force creative problem-solving approaches that can ultimately benefit the final products, but these challenges shouldn’t be romanticized. Systemic barriers to women’s advancement in design fields remain significant and require ongoing, deliberate efforts to address.

The industry still faces challenges in recruiting and retaining female designers, particularly in leadership positions. Educational pathways, hiring practices, work environments, and advancement opportunities all need examination to create truly inclusive design cultures. Individual success stories, while important, don’t necessarily indicate systemic change.

Design Through Collaboration

King Living’s design process appears to thrive on collaborative energy. Ideas flow between designers, engineers, and craftspeople in an iterative process that refines concepts through multiple disciplines and viewpoints.

For Lim’s Issho table, the process began with exploring form. According to her published comments, she investigated how repeated elements could create a harmonious whole. This exploration led to the dynamic tension between components that defines the table’s distinctive base while providing necessary structural support.

Material exploration and prototyping would typically follow the conceptual phase. Working directly with physical materials reveals possibilities and constraints that sketching alone can’t capture or address. This hands-on approach characterizes many furniture development processes, grounding creative concepts in physical reality through multiple iterations.

Throughout development, universal design considerations would ideally remain central to the evaluation process. Teams assess whether their designs will work for diverse users in various settings. This questioning can lead to innovations in adjustability and adaptability that might otherwise be overlooked in more conventional design processes.

The collaborative approach might extend beyond the design team to include user feedback. Companies can gather insights from people using their furniture in real homes under everyday conditions. These observations inform refinements to existing designs and inspire new directions that address previously unrecognized needs.

While this collaborative process has clear benefits, it also presents challenges. Balancing diverse perspectives while maintaining design coherence requires skilled leadership. The inclusion of more voices in the process doesn’t automatically translate to better outcomes without thoughtful facilitation and clear decision-making frameworks.

The Future of Furniture Design

What might King Living’s approach tell us about where furniture design could be heading in the coming years?

First, expect universality to become increasingly sophisticated. Designers will likely move beyond one-size-fits-all approaches to create systems that accommodate human diversity without calling attention to specific accommodations. Future furniture may embrace inclusive design principles through adaptability, emotional consideration, and user-centered approaches that recognize the variety of human needs and preferences.

Second, watch for increasingly fluid boundaries between living spaces. Homes continue to accommodate multiple functions within limited square footage. As spaces serve multiple purposes, furniture will follow suit. Rigid categorization may continue giving way to flexible solutions that adapt to different activities throughout the day rather than requiring dedicated rooms for each function.

Third, anticipate deeper integration of sustainability principles beyond material selection. This could include structural approaches and business models that extend product lifecycles. Durability and adaptability may become central environmental considerations, extending product lifecycles and reducing waste through designs that evolve rather than requiring replacement.

Fourth, we expect more cross-disciplinary collaborations, such as the partnership between Fong and artist Lizzy Stageman. These collaborations bring fresh perspectives and cultural elements into furniture design, creating pieces that function as both practical objects and artistic expressions.

Perhaps most significantly, diverse design teams will likely continue creating furniture that works better for more people. Including perspectives previously excluded from the design process could lead to innovations we can’t yet imagine. As barriers fall and perspectives broaden through increased representation, our living spaces might better reflect and support human diversity in all its forms.

King Living summarizes this philosophy with the statement: “A balance of perspectives leads to a balanced, universal design.”

The work of designers like Lim and Fong demonstrates this principle in action. Their furniture accommodates diverse needs while maintaining aesthetic coherence and functional excellence. Their designs suggest that expanding who shapes our material world could create more sustainable, inclusive, and human environments.

That’s a direction worth following, though the journey toward truly inclusive design practices and genuinely sustainable furniture production remains ongoing. No single company has “solved” these challenges, and meaningful progress will require continued effort, innovation, and critical self-assessment from the entire industry.

The post The Women Reshaping Furniture Design at King Living first appeared on Yanko Design.

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