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2026 news

REIMAGINING BEAUTY
Pure design, exquisite finishes, and enduring elegance guide the continual evolution of Porro’s landscapes, conceived for both residential settings and international projects, for today and beyond.

Building on the milestone of its 100th anniversary celebrated last year, Porro continues its path of constant evolution, ready to embrace new creative challenges, while continuing to explore the role of design and its relationship with those who experience it. If the past remains a lasting source of inspiration and an essential element of the brand’s visual identity, the present is defined by continuous research and new creative collaborations with international partners.
From the long-standing and fruitful dialogue with Piero Lissoni, Porro’s art director for the past 30 years, to the renewed collaboration with Japanese designer Nao Tamura and Dordoni Studio, and the debut of the renowned US-based studio Yabu Pushelberg, Porro explores new languages and typologies, shaping fresh narratives that once again transform the identity of its interiors without ever renouncing its own.

The 2026 novelties expand Porro’s collections like new notes in a collective composition – deeply rooted in the present yet aspiring to timelessness. On the one hand, the purity and allure of Porro’s furnishings increasingly push research toward the boundary between industrial object and sculpture, between design and gallery. On the other hand, the brand broadens its scope by looking at the contract world, a field in which the company has strengthened its own team in recent years, and to which it naturally speaks thanks to its production flexibility and bespoke manufacturing expertise.
From large-scale retail spaces, where Porro’s modular systems orchestrate interiors with elegance, to multi-apartment developments that choose Porro’s wardrobe as the main character of the bedroom area, the Italian brand moves confidently across the international contract stage, demonstrating how its essence is strengthened through exchange and dialogue between different worlds.

ARNALDO ARMCHAIR, designed by Yabu Pushelberg

With offices in New York and Toronto and a team of over 100 professionals, Yabu Pushelberg brings an external perspective to the Porro project, offering a fresh and unexpected point of view.
From this encounter with Porro comes the Arnaldo armchair, where the suspended seat is set between the armrests and the backrest in a harmonious interplay of solids and voids, creating a compact, comfortable, and enveloping silhouette.
The upholstery, in fabric or leather, gently embraces its soft forms: an intimate piece of furniture, capable of evolving and accompanying family life for decades, or transforming into a discreet yet distinctive seating solution in hospitality settings.
A demonstration of how different cultures and latitudes can converge into an emotional narrative, born from shared visions and kindred sensibilities, rooted in the purity of form and in meticulous attention to tailored detail.

BREZZA CHAIR, designed by Piero Lissoni

The new Brezza chair represents the wooden evolution of Piero Lissoni’s Frank chair. The soft, enveloping shell backrest and the padded seat remain, while the legs—solid and sturdy, yet gaining elegance through their circular and variable section—are now offered in turned black-stained ash, fully embodying the Porro aesthetic.

GUITAR COFFEE TABLE, designed by CRS Porro

The new Guitar coffee table collection, designed by CRS Porro, is defined by delicate combinations and layering, in different heights and sizes. Thick tabletops, made of solid ash or glossy lacquer, with rounded or teardrop shapes, rest on truncated-cone concrete bases, creating dynamic and tactile compositions whose organic design establishes a contrastive dialogue with the geometric rigor of Porro’s design language.

HITA LOUNGE CHAIR, designed by Dordoni Studio

Following the debut last year of the Twin sideboard, Dordoni Studio continues its collaboration with Porro with the cocoon Hita lounge chair.
With grace and substance, Hita features a continuous volume, elevated on an asymmetrical, swivelling, conical base in wood —also available with a return mechanism—which streamlines the structure and makes it versatile for residential, contract and office environments.
Its sculptural form, emphasized by the taut fabric stretched over the backrest, offers an unexpected inner softness thanks to the generous thickness of the seat cushion, creating a contrast with the more rigorous and sculptural outer shell.
Inspired by 1950s and 1960s design, Hita is the ideal complement to the Porro living collection and to the sofa families presented last year, offering a deluxe seating solution that nods to the past while confidently engaging with the future.

RYO BOOKCASE, design Nao Tamura

After collaborating on the Origata bench and desk, Nao Tamura returns to design for Porro with the Ryo bookcase.
A shimmering fifth element within the space, Ryo is composed of long horizontal shelves supported by adjustable triangular elements made by folding a single sheet of aluminum, together creating open, multifunctional shelving systems. The Japanese name “Ryo” (稜) means edge or ridge: the precise line where two planes meet in tension. Symbol of energy and stability, the triangle conveys both lightness and solidity, depending on the viewpoint. A matrix for composing dynamic spaces, Ryo takes shape as a sculptural object with a deconstructivist design language that goes beyond pure functionality. It becomes a surface where light shimmers and shadows interact, enhanced by an almost invisible protective finish that preserves the material’s raw texture and natural character.
Through light and color, Ryo articulates the interior with a quiet sense of order, shaping the surrounding environment and creating engaging sensory experiences.

TWIN LOW TABLE, designed by Dordoni Studio

The new Twin low table translates into a new scale the design language of the eponymous sideboard presented last year by Dordoni Studio.
An elegant square-based parallelepiped in bruno stained ash wood, Twin plays with surfaces cut at 45 degrees and a top recessed in travertine or mirror. The composition creates a measured dialogue between solid volumes and voids, lending the piece both plasticity and dynamism. A play of interlocking forms that intersect with the precision and lightness of origami.

SHARE COFFEE TABLE, designed by RCS Porro

A practical addition to the living area, the new Share coffee table by CRS Porro celebrates the ritual of serving.
The moka painted cantilever metal frame, with a half-cross base, supports a solid wood top that can be easily removed and used as a tray, combining functionality with elegance.