“Campfire Screen by Steelcase. The thinking behind the Campfire Collection was to allow for breakaway collaborative group settings that can take place within a larger open-air environment. To that end, Turnstone by Steelcase has succeeded with a line of versatile, colorful furniture and accessories. Sometimes though, a little privacy is needed and this is where the Campfire Screen becomes a must have.Complementing all settings, the screen’s semi-transparent material allows you to maintain higher degree of privacy when needed. Arrange them to quadrant off workspaces or pull them together as a private office that clearly reads Òdo not disturb.Ó Both left hand and right hand screens are available and showcased in the photo gallery Steelcase HistoryDesign isn’t just about style. It’s about integrity of materials, functional integrity and intent. — Glen Oliver Low, designer of the Think chairAt the turn of the 20th century, steel construction was making building exteriors less flammable, but office interiors were still crowded with wooden furniture, and still heated and lighted by open flame appliances. Smoking presented another fire hazard because ashes were often dumped in wicker wastepaper baskets. Beginning in 1912 in Grand Rapids, Michigan, The Metal Office Furniture Company (renamed Steelcase in 1954) had just 15 employees and a single product — a fireproof, metal wastepaper basket named the Victor!Co-founder Peter M. Wege, a designer who had received several patents for sheet metal structures, was well aware of the fireproof benefits of metal office products. Wege and Chris Stone designed a metal office desk which won a bid for a federal contract, and thus the company began manufacturing office desks.During the 1930s, Metal Office collaborated with world-famous architect Frank Lloyd Wright to produce furniture for the S.C. Johnson & Sons in Racine building, which Life magazine called the most inspirational office building of the 20th century.During World War II, the company designed steel shipb
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