The home of architecture and design in the Asia-Pacific

Get the latest design news direct to your inbox!

Walking on Water

In a return to craftsmanship practices of the past, Australian furniture designer and surfer, Peter Walker, is on a mission to create working wooden surfboards.

Walking on Water


BY

April 30th, 2008


Although timber was made temporarily redundant in the surfing industry after the advent of foam and fiberglass, Hawaiians in ancient times surfed on boards made of timber planks.

American surfing pioneer Tom Blake in the 1930s, discovered the timber boards and replicated the shape, drilling hundreds of holes in the wood before sheathing the hull in marine plywood veneer and creating the first hollow surfboard. Walker is now continuing the story of the timber surfboard, transposing contemporary design onto the natural material and traditional technique to produce hollow wooden boards that are both fully functioning and examples of fine craftsmanship.

Walker, working out of his studio at the Jam Factory in Adelaide while on his break from being Associate Professor in furniture design at the Rhode Island School of Design, recently exhibited his boards at Design inTENT in Canberra as part of the Canberra Biennial in 2007.

Peter Walker
pwalker@risd.edu

INDESIGN is on instagram

Follow @indesignlive


The Indesign Collection

A searchable and comprehensive guide for specifying leading products and their suppliers


Indesign Our Partners

Keep up to date with the latest and greatest from our industry BFF's!

A collective vision: The whimsical workplace with Intuit, COX and MillerKnoll

A collective vision: The whimsical workplace with Intuit, COX and MillerKnoll

Stepping into Intuit’s Sydney workplace certainly doesn’t feel like walking into an office. Why? In this film, we discover that, when joy takes precedence as a design driver, even a high-performing commercial CBD headquarters can feel like an intuitive wonderland that invites employees to choose their own adventure.

Michael Drescher and Jacob Olsen on finding the sweet spot with Herman Miller’s Sayl Chair

Michael Drescher and Jacob Olsen on finding the sweet spot with Herman Miller’s Sayl Chair

In the second instalment of our performance seating three-parter, we turn to DKO’s Michael Drescher and Jacob Olsen to peek behind Sayl’s confident architectural form and explore the ideas of inclusivity, adaptability and freedom to move as hallmarks of what sitting your best actually means.

Dale O’Brien on sitting easy with Herman Miller’s Verus Chair

Dale O’Brien on sitting easy with Herman Miller’s Verus Chair

In the first instalment of our three-part series exploring what it means to sit your best, we pose the question to Gray Puksand’s Dale O’Brien, who discusses the importance of ease and majority rule when it comes to sitting and reveals why specifying a task chair is not unlike choosing a Volvo.

Alex Bain on finding his anchor in Herman Miller’s Aeron Chair

Alex Bain on finding his anchor in Herman Miller’s Aeron Chair

In the last instalment of our three-part performance seating series, Alex Bain from Architectus explains why sitting well shouldn’t feel like sitting at all and explores an unexpected success metric of the hybrid workplace: the grounding power of emotional support.

Related Stories


While you were sleeping

The internet never sleeps! Here's the stuff you might have missed