What does marble want?

Pipelto

Lotte Huggel

“Pipelto” – Versatile marble trays for food presentation.
Nowadays, it is difficult to envisage marble as anything more than a helpless commodity.
Pipelto trays are made using Lasa marble residues from Alvar Aalto’s Finlandia Hall, Helsinki.
The trays are designed to alter the way people perceive marble on both a visual and experiential level, whilst simultaneously providing a heightened appreciation of the food they are consuming. As a result of marble’s pre-existing status, and the assumptions that are held of it, the trays immediately elevate the “status” of the food beyond the everyday.
My aim is to show that there is always an alternative, and always a way to make the most of what is in front of us. By using “waste products” to compliment and even enhance the aesthetic appeal of the food service industry, Pipelto can help to demonstrate that the lines between extravagant and basic, useless and useful, were never really there in the first place.

A project made in the course

The White Marble Project.

The White Marble Project. During the winter semester 2022/23, we have been exploring the potential of white Lasa marble, which is a 400-million-year-old metamorphic stone from the Jennwand massif of the Vinschgau Nörderberg, located on the edge of the Stilfserjoch National Park. As one of the most valuable natural resources of South Tyrol, which is otherwise rather poor in mineral raw materials, white marble has been quarried in the Vinschgau Valley for centuries, especially in Laas and Göflan. It has been exported by the ton as building material and decorative stone all over the world and yet it only represents a limited deposit that will be exhausted within just a few generations.
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