Architects design structures made to be lived in, worked in, studied in. Or simply seen and interacted with. Yet many distill their design ethos into functional tools for the home. More affordable and with shorter production times, everyday objects like chairs make an architect’s point of view more accessible to the masses. All the more so with silverware. While less common than furniture, architect-designed cutlery condenses the underlying ideologies of large-scale projects into handheld tools. Below, find five flatware kits from world-renowned architects, each of which reflects its maker’s signature style.
Alessi Mu

With handles that echo chopsticks and shallow spoon bowls inspired by gingko leaves, Pritzker Prize–winning architect Toyo Ito applied Japanese influences to Western-style cutlery in his Mu flatware collection. Ito has built his career on architecture intended to liberate buildings from the confines of an urban grid, relaxing boundaries by integrating negative space and faceted windows into solid forms.
Year Created: 2013
Architect: Toyo Ito
Notable Buildings: Kaohsiung National Stadium, Taiwan; Museo Internacional del Barroco, Mexico; Za-Koenji Public Theater, Tokyo; Taichung Opera House, Taiwan