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Swedish designer who inspired Ikea flat-pack concept dies | Swedish designer who inspired Ikea flat-pack concept dies |
(about 1 hour later) | |
STOCKHOLM — Gillis Lundgren, who designed some of Ikea’s best-selling furniture and played a role in developing the company’s self-assembly concept, has died. He was 86. | STOCKHOLM — Gillis Lundgren, who designed some of Ikea’s best-selling furniture and played a role in developing the company’s self-assembly concept, has died. He was 86. |
Kajsa Johansson, a spokeswoman for the Swedish furniture giant, confirmed Thursday that Lundgren had died but couldn’t give any other details. | Kajsa Johansson, a spokeswoman for the Swedish furniture giant, confirmed Thursday that Lundgren had died but couldn’t give any other details. |
Lundgren joined Ikea as its fourth employee in 1953 when it was just a small mail-order business in the Swedish town of Almhult. Working closely with its founder, Ingvar Kamprad, Lundgren saw the company grow into a multinational corporation with more than 100,000 employees. | |
He designed scores of Ikea products, including the popular “Billy” bookcase in the late 1970s. Lundgren said he first drew the simple design on a napkin. In 2009 Ikea said it had made 41 million “Billy” bookcases. | |
Lundgren has also been credited with inspiring the flat-pack, self-assembly concept that revolutionized the company when, after a photo shoot for the Ikea catalog in the 1950s, he removed the legs of a table so it could fit into a car. | |
Lundgren described the occasion when he received the Swedish Tenzing Prize for innovators in 2012. | |
“I told Ingvar that I think that table takes too much darn space. I think we should unscrew the legs and put them under the table,” Lundgren said. | |
Kamprad also recalled the episode in the 1998 book “Leading by Design — the Ikea Story,” by Bertil Torekull. | |
“We had our first flat parcel, and thus we started a revolution,” said Kamprad, who is now 89. | |
Kamprad noted that Ikea was not the first to sell self-assembly furniture, but “the first systematically to develop the idea commercially.” | |
After retirement, Lundgren continued working as a consultant for Ikea into his 80s. | |
In a statement to The Associated Press, Ikea said Lundgren will be remembered as a man “full of ideas that quickly were turned into practical products.” | |
Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. | Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |
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