“There is nothing dustier than a conventional lighting and furniture showroom,” says Tom Dixon. So at Milan Design Week 2019, he opens The Manzoni, a 100-pax restaurant that will be his permanent base in mainland Europe.
He’s taken over an abandoned cinema, opened a pop-up restaurant, and even designed his own multiplex – Tom Dixon‘s showing had always been one of the highlights of Milan Design Week. His absence was felt last year. This year, he returns with The Manzoni, a 100-pax restaurant five-minute-walk north of the Duomo.
The Manzoni is not an elaborate temporary concept that will be packed away after the design week.
“We wanted to look at different ways of being present in Milan. After years of doing five-day exhibitions in Milan, we finally decided that we had enough of putting such huge energy into pop-up interventions,” says Dixon. “We need a place where people slow down and experience our products in a live setting.”

Tom Dixon with Fat chair and Spring light
The Manzoni, he shares, is a “big scheme” to avoid having a conventional showroom.“There is nothing dustier than a conventional lighting and furniture showroom. But with The Manzoni, people are able to experience our new collections in an active context,” he adds.
The Manzoni serves lunch, afternoon tea and dinner in various settings furnished with Tom Dixon latest. The dining room is decked with custom cork tables and the Fat chairs, the brand’s new upholstery chair range that is designed to hug the body and allows for multiple sitting positions.
“And for once, we have some lights that are really really bright and illuminating, creating this very monastic and minimal atmosphere,” he adds, referring to a series of translucent Opal lights, another new product arranged on, around, and above the dining tables like a string of lustrous pearls.

The Bar
The interior goes large on materiality. The bar is chiselled from granite, the serving boards are made with marble offcuts mined from Verona while the artworks are made from patented paper-based solid surface Paper Factor.

The Jungle
Dining during Milan Design Week is by strictly invite only, but the restaurant’s Jungle – a shop area featuring lush plants, stainless steel lights Spring, Fatstools and marble table Primavera – and the showroom area are open to the public from 11 am to 6 pm.
The Manzoni will be closed after Milan Design Week and reopened to the public in May. It will be Tom Dixon’s permanent base in mainland Europe – a sensible strategy to counter the uncertainty of Brexit.
Why a restaurant and why in Milan? “In the world where everybody has a short attention span, food is one of the few things that can slow people down,” shares Dixon. And it was in Milan that he first learned of the connection between food, design and business. “I have observed that all the best decisions are made over lunch or dinner,” he quips.
For more updates from the streets of Salone del Mobile, follow along at #MilanIndesign2019.
INDESIGN is on instagram
Follow @indesignlive
A searchable and comprehensive guide for specifying leading products and their suppliers
Keep up to date with the latest and greatest from our industry BFF's!
At the Munarra Centre for Regional Excellence on Yorta Yorta Country in Victoria, ARM Architecture and Milliken use PrintWorks™ technology to translate First Nations narratives into a layered, community-led floorscape.
For a closer look behind the creative process, watch this video interview with Sebastian Nash, where he explores the making of King Living’s textile range – from fibre choices to design intent.
With a minimalist aesthetic and an inventive approach to product, ZETR is challenging the way electrical accessories are designed, made and experienced.
Take a whirlwind tour of some of the standout appearances at 3daysofdesign 2025.
The internet never sleeps! Here's the stuff you might have missed
A thoughtful, low-waste redesign by PMG Group in collaboration with Goodman has transformed a dated office into a calm, contemporary workspace featuring a coastal-inspired palette and Milliken flooring for a refined finish.
In the New Year, architecture will be defined by its ability to orchestrate relationships between inside and outside, public and private, humans and ecology, and data and intuition.