Woody: a collection meant to be lived in

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Woody: a collection meant to be lived in

Some objects are born to inhabit that subtle frontier between the public and the private. Places that aren’t truly ours yet feel familiar: a hotel terrace, the inner courtyard of a restaurant, or those in-between zones where architecture slows down and invites pause. In all of those settings, the Woody collection—designed by Josep Lluscà—acts as a bridge between comfort and functionality.

A collection designed to create warmth

Its form says everything. The slatted backrest, a contemporary reinterpretation of classic Mediterranean wooden chairs, activates a collective memory: the warmth of familiarity, the solidity of enduring objects, the easy tactility of what we already know. Woody takes that image, strips it of nostalgia, and turns it into something modern, lightweight, and visually permeable. It offers a type of warmth that doesn’t rely on materiality alone, but on the atmosphere it’s capable of generating.

In the hospitality sector, where outdoor spaces have become an increasingly valuable asset, this kind of sensitivity matters. A chair is no longer expected simply to endure; it must also welcome. Woody achieves this through a careful balance between visual lightness—softening any setting—and the durability required for continuous service. Made of polypropylene, it is both solid and easy to handle. With this design, Resol demonstrates its commitment to furniture that is lasting and functional, capable of withstanding the constant movement of a restaurant or the sun exposure of a hotel terrace without losing any of its pleasant tactility or its refined finish.

A versatile collection

Its functionality is designed for spaces with their own rhythm: endlessly stackable, easy to move, and equipped with arms that allow it to hang directly from the table—streamlining cleaning during peak hours. Its chromatic range—natural, soft, neutral, and saturated hues with UV protection—makes it adaptable to virtually any aesthetic narrative: from a Mediterranean boutique hotel to an urban rooftop shaped by shadows and geometry.

The collection includes a chair, a lounge armchair, a high stool, a counter stool, and an optional cushion to extend comfort. Yet its essence remains unchanged: to bring warmth. Not a domestic warmth, but the more elusive kind—the one that makes guests stay a little longer. The warmth that turns a public space into a place where one simply wants to be.