Creating furniture thatâs both accessible and chic can be a challenge, but thatâs exactly what Pottery Barn and Michael Graves Design have done with their inaugural collaboration. The line of bedroom pieces and upholstered armchairs, which launches today, combines Pottery Barnâs breezy California aesthetic with Michael Graves Designâs expertise in accessible design so that style and safety features can coexist.
The beds, nightstands, dressers, and side benches are extensions of Pottery Barnâs most popular bedroom collections. Fans of Sausalito, Farmhouse, and Cayman will recognize their beloved finishes, silhouettes, and decorative details in the collaboration itemsâbut with additional elements that provide support for aging adults and people with disabilities.
âWhat we did was bring these novel functional enhancements to these pieces, but theyâre still extensions of these core collections,â explains Rob Van Varick, the chief design officer at Michael Graves Design. âYou have three very different options that are going to appeal to a whole range of customers, so itâs really about putting accessibility in the center. You can mix and match, you can get the whole suite, or you can get parts of it.â
All three beds are equipped with integrated armrests and âpull and rollâ grips that assist with sitting, standing, and repositioning in bed. âOne of the biggest challenges of designing for accessibility is that everyoneâs unique,â explains Van Varick. âItâs really about finding those commonalities and solving those big problems. Fall prevention is a big one, which is about helping people with ingress and egress.â
Built-in storage benches at the foot of the beds are for getting dressed and âfurniture surfing,â the act of using furniture as a stabilizer while moving through a room. The collaboration dressers are outfitted with grab rails for these reasons, as well. âWe wanted to create a touchpoint on the dresser that really was there for that,â Van Varick says. âIt’s really minimal. You donât really see it, but itâs there. In the consumer-preference testing, everybody loved it.â
The dressers and nightstands have raised edges, too, to prevent objects from rolling off and needing to be retrieved. And theyâre adorned with hardware thatâs easy to pull and see. âSomebody over 65 needs three times more light to see than someone in their 20s,â shares Van Varick. âIf you have a knob that is the same color as the rest of the drawer front, it becomes invisible. Contrast is a big one for us.â