Aurelia Pleyer is a Designer based in Munich. She completed her Bachelor as Industrial Designer at University of Applied Sciences in Munich, Germany and her Master as a Product Designer at ECAL in Lausanne, Switzerland.



Collaboration I Experience

2024 Decathlon X ECAL
2023 Horgenglarus X ECAL
2023 Ceramaret X ECAL
2023 Studio Stefan Scholten
2022 HAY
2020 Form Us With Love
2019  Coalesse
2019  Vitra X University of Applied Sciences




Exhibition

09/2024-02/2025
We Will Survive /
Mudac Lausanne X ECAL

09/2024
Sortir Du Cadre /
Paris Design Week
X Decathlon X ECAL

06/2024
The future is...older /
Lausanne Design Days
X Horgenglarus X ECAL





Image by Nina Pacherová

Pied
Pied triggers motion while making work more versatile throughout the day.

Leaning on the functionality of an elephant step, three spring casters allow the high stool to roll smoothly. As soon as sitting down, it remains stationary. Its suspension castors will then retract, while its rubber ring will ensure complete immobility. The conical shape and clipping system make it stackable and assemble without any tools.



With kind regards

Supported by Forbo
The way we work is changing.
Today, we no longer stay at a fixed desk in a single place but need flexibility and movement. As we perform a variety of tasks during the day, we wish for an equally diverse range of spaces to create, concentrate, communicate, and think within.

With kind regards proposes an open way of working at two surfaces. Sitting or standing, the furniture explores different possibilities of work situations. The simple and direct, yet versatile structure uses wood to create a warm, welcoming surrounding. Encouraging to work in new ways, With kind regards is a flexible place for both short and longer E-Mails.



Meander

X Vitra

With Lara Bittel, Bine Mayr, and Reka Nagy
A meander is created by the oscillation of the streamline in a river. The stairs are the river, the hypothesis is the meander that breaks out of the rigid, inflexible and fixed structure.

The meander takes its natural, open flow and spreads as it goes. The dynamic curves take the path of the people as they use it and define a new, vibrant and living staircase. It is a place for exchange, recharge and short meetings at the Zeughaus of University of Applied Sciences in Munich.



OOHThe New Normal of work is shaped by the circumstances, issues and opportunities that surround it. The increase of working remote has shifted a work place to another and flexible, adaptive structures are getting necessary.

Reacting to current and future work scenarios, O O H is an outdoor office hub that provides an additional space to focus, create, and collaborate besides existing workplaces.



UpUp is a collection of three space efficient, adjustable tables designed for staked railings on domestic balconies. In contrast to the vertical slats, Up breaks the lines with round, floating surfaces. Galvanized steel gives the yet fragile pieces, a rather strong and long lasting character. Up enhances to use the small but precious space of a balcony.


Emi-Series

X Ceramaret

With Loïs Weber
The Emi series introduces a new way of charging, eliminating the chaos of cables by using induction. With the electromagnetic properties of ceramics, the series uses the high precision manufacturing processes of Ceramaret.

Emi-01 explores the alcove as a niche to charge electric home devices. The objects turn the common plug system into integrated wall furniture, still maintaining the strong visual language of Feller frames. Emi-02 acts as an induction charging station for the mobile device. Through the magnetic properties, the phone is secured in place gently blending into the surface. By connecting to an app the phone transforms into a home control application, changing the temperature, managing the shutters, displaying the time as well as directing the Iight. Visually the interfaces celebrate the Feller aesthetic, merging its iconic visual identity with modern technology.



Hock 
di hi
Hock di hi refers to the Bavarian motto Hock di her dann sama mehr which asks you to join and sit together, then we are more which is better. It consists of two wooden stools, that can be expanded by a fitting plank so that it gets converted into a bench. Instead of two people, up to four people can be seated. If you don’t need the additional board, you can stow it on a wall and use it as a wardrobe.



LineaLinea is a linear light and shelfing system for the kitchen. Adapted to everyday’s use - for both concentration and leisure, Linea adjusts in light intensity and layouts. Reacting to various 
situations, as for preparing food, cooking and eating, studying, working, or resting, Linea welcomes different moods.




Y Table

X Horgenglarus + Senior-Lab
As we get weaker by age, we depend on a trusting and supportive environment. Born from the observation that elderly people hold onto their furniture to gain stability, Y is a bedside table with stand up guide. Its structure eases the transition from bed to an upright position and serves as a support while standing and moving. In collaboration with the Swiss wood furniture manufacturer Horgenglarus, the Y bedside table uses its expertise in wood-bending techniques.



E-Venture

X Decathlon

With Gabriella Garnham and Yichen Wu
Referring to the human body and the way it is made up of layers of bone, muscle and skin, Eventure rethinks the anatomy of a bike, finding a more sustainable alternative to contemporary cast aluminium bike frames. A skeleton steel frame houses the electrical components and creates space within the bike’s skin to store essentials for touring.

In keeping with the nature of layering up to go outdoors, the Eventure bike skin references  technical cloths found in outdoor apparel and uses deadstock textiles from the Decathlon camping range. Allowing flexible storage and weight efficiency for both long and short trips, the skin adds luggage space layer by layer, suitable for everything from a day’s exploration through to a full week Eventure, and it is equally suitable and adaptable for a daily commute.



Solar 
4‘809


With Loïs Weber
Imagining a world where designers secede from their surrounding, make acquaintances with the forces at play in our direct surrounding, sun, air, earth, water and the bioclimatic balances that organize them. Trying to no longer think of objects as autonomous productions, but as constitutive elements of their environment. When the design methodology becomes highly specific and is inspired by the fast changing biotopes of our contemporary societies, diversity and particularities that we (re)discover every day are associated with the study of vernacular, passive and oft- forgotten knowledges.

A solar heater is based on a curved reflective surface, that concentrates sunlight along a line to generate a source of heat. Solar 4‘809 finds its use as a communal station for the alpine area and contributes to the balance of the place where it exists.



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