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  2. Hansgrohe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hansgrohe

    Under his company leadership, Hansgrohe started to work with external designers in the late 1960s, including Hartmut Esslinger (frog design) and later on Phoenix Design and Philippe Starck. Klaus Grohe also reached out to explore new market segments: In 1981 Hansgrohe began producing faucets and introduced a greywater recycling system in 2001.

  3. Grohe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grohe

    The company started as a ferric hardware factory in 1911 under the name Berkenhoff & Paschedag, located in Hemer, Germany; it was taken over by Friedrich Grohe in 1936, who focused on sanitary faucets only. Before that, Friedrich used to work for his father's company Hansgrohe, founded in 1901. The first order from outside of Germany came in 1938.

  4. Mercedes-Benz Axor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercedes-Benz_Axor

    A pre-facelift Axor A Mercedes-Benz Axor 2543 Mercedes Benz Axor 1829 A 4x4 of the Bundeswehr. The Mercedes-Benz Axor is a heavy truck manufactured by Daimler Truck between 1999 and 2016 designed to fill the gap between the premium Actros tractors and the mostly rigid Atego trucks and was targeted at fleet customers.

  5. Philippe Starck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philippe_Starck

    Starck also designed affordable and adjustable pre-fabricated P.A.T.H. houses. [44] Starck was commissioned by the Hilton Worldwide to create an entirely new hotel in Metz, France. Maison Heler is a phantasmagoric building topped by a traditional Alsatian house, a poetic symbol of the region that will open in 2025. [45] [46]

  6. Juicy Salif - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juicy_Salif

    Juicy Salif, a citrus reamer designed by Philippe Starck in 1990, is considered an icon of industrial design, and has been displayed in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art [1] and the Metropolitan Museum of Art [2] in New York City, as well as the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. [3]

  7. Starck AS-37 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starck_AS-37

    The AS-37 is conventionally constructed from wood, with a spruce structure covered with acajou plywood.The small gap, high stagger wing arrangement first proposed by Nenadovitch [1] is the aircraft's most unusual feature, though one that its designer André Starck had used in two of his earlier aircraft, the AS-20 from 1942 and the AS-27 from the early 1970s.