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Interlübke

interlübke is one of Germany's most storied furniture brands for bedroom and living room furniture — founded in 1937 in Wiedenbrück (Westphalia) by brothers Leo and Hans Lübke as a specialised factory for polished bedroom furniture with wardrobes, dressers and beds. The brand name interlübke was coined in 1963 as a natural association with "interior" and "internationality"; Michael Bayer designed the word logo that is still used to this day. In 1963, Swiss interior designer Walter Müller proposed the concept of the "endless wardrobe" — a wardrobe system assembled from few parts that can be extended almost infinitely. Under the name interlübke 61 it became a market success and is considered the birth of the modern modular wardrobe wall system; its further development is today collectplus. The company has been owned by the Oehmke family (Domovari) since August 2022. All production takes place exclusively at the Rheda-Wiedenbrück site. Credo: "Perfection is achieved when nothing more can be taken away."

Designer collaborations and product history: Peter Maly (duo, mutaro, 40S — 1970s/80s), Rolf Heide (alternum, SL revision), Wulf Schneider (first illuminated interlübke furniture), Werner Aisslinger (cube chest of drawers series — one of interlübke's most successful product areas since 2002), Christian Haas (pical, canvas). Collections/systems (current): collectplus (wardrobe system, universally usable in all living areas), cube, studimo, tavi, jorel reflect (high gloss, indigo, handleless touch-opening mechanism), START, mell, reef. Product categories: wardrobe systems (fitted wardrobes, wall systems), sideboards, lowboards, highboards, beds, bedside tables, shelving, desks, display cabinet systems. Numerous design awards: German Design Award, Interior Innovation Award.

For architects and interior designers seeking for residential, premium living and hospitality projects a German heritage brand for bedroom and living room furniture founded in Rheda-Wiedenbrück (Westphalia) in 1937 that as the inventor of the modern endless wardrobe system (interlübke 61, 1963, Walter Müller) and with a timeless design language under the credo "Perfection is achieved when nothing more can be taken away" ranks among the few German furniture brands that actively practice brand management, with designer collaborations from Werner Aisslinger (cube) to Christian Haas (pical) and complete own production at the Rheda-Wiedenbrück site — interlübke invented the endless wardrobe in 1963: Walter Müller, few parts, almost infinitely extendable — today collectplus as its further development, Werner Aisslinger and Christian Haas as designers, "nothing more can be taken away" as an unchanged credo since 1937.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Interlübke

interlübke is one of Germany's most storied furniture brands for bedroom and living room furniture — founded in 1937 in Wiedenbrück (Westphalia) by brothers Leo and Hans Lübke as a specialised factory for polished bedroom furniture with wardrobes, dressers and beds. The brand name interlübke was coined in 1963 as a natural association with "interior" and "internationality"; Michael Bayer designed the word logo that is still used to this day. In 1963, Swiss interior designer Walter Müller proposed the concept of the "endless wardrobe" — a wardrobe system assembled from few parts that can be extended almost infinitely. Under the name interlübke 61 it became a market success and is considered the birth of the modern modular wardrobe wall system; its further development is today collectplus. The company has been owned by the Oehmke family (Domovari) since August 2022. All production takes place exclusively at the Rheda-Wiedenbrück site. Credo: "Perfection is achieved when nothing more can be taken away."

Designer collaborations and product history: Peter Maly (duo, mutaro, 40S — 1970s/80s), Rolf Heide (alternum, SL revision), Wulf Schneider (first illuminated interlübke furniture), Werner Aisslinger (cube chest of drawers series — one of interlübke's most successful product areas since 2002), Christian Haas (pical, canvas). Collections/systems (current): collectplus (wardrobe system, universally usable in all living areas), cube, studimo, tavi, jorel reflect (high gloss, indigo, handleless touch-opening mechanism), START, mell, reef. Product categories: wardrobe systems (fitted wardrobes, wall systems), sideboards, lowboards, highboards, beds, bedside tables, shelving, desks, display cabinet systems. Numerous design awards: German Design Award, Interior Innovation Award.

For architects and interior designers seeking for residential, premium living and hospitality projects a German heritage brand for bedroom and living room furniture founded in Rheda-Wiedenbrück (Westphalia) in 1937 that as the inventor of the modern endless wardrobe system (interlübke 61, 1963, Walter Müller) and with a timeless design language under the credo "Perfection is achieved when nothing more can be taken away" ranks among the few German furniture brands that actively practice brand management, with designer collaborations from Werner Aisslinger (cube) to Christian Haas (pical) and complete own production at the Rheda-Wiedenbrück site — interlübke invented the endless wardrobe in 1963: Walter Müller, few parts, almost infinitely extendable — today collectplus as its further development, Werner Aisslinger and Christian Haas as designers, "nothing more can be taken away" as an unchanged credo since 1937.