Lise Vester “I was thinking a lot about how we spend our days in autopilot - always on, always forward. Dream View is a deliberate interruption to that rhythm.”
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Lise Vester “I was thinking a lot about how we spend our days in autopilot - always on, always forward. Dream View is a deliberate interruption to that rhythm.”
Bringing healthcare principles into furniture design
Her background in Healing Architecture made her especially attuned to the emotional potential of design. Dream View Bench is her way of translating those healthcare principles into something more universal and everyday, something that brings comfort without feeling clinical. The concept also echoes ideas from Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, which Vester was personally exploring at the time. The project began with a simple, expansive question: How can furniture support mental well-being?
Lise Vester “I was drawn to how design could mirror those CBT techniques—opening up space for self-reflection, connection, and letting go.”
From concept to curve
“I wanted something that feels sculptural but also welcoming,” she says. “People think it has a hard surface, but when they sit, they’re surprised, it adapts to them.”
An invitation to daydream
While the design is rooted in ergonomics and neuroscience, it’s also deeply human. “I was inspired by the concept of the ‘infraordinary’, the unnoticed beauty of daily life, like the way the sky changes, or the way clouds move,” she says.
Lise Vester “Daydreaming helps us catch those things. It gives the brain space to rest, reset, and imagine.”
Available in two versions, a bench for shared day dreaming and a single chair for solitude, Dream View invites users to pause, together or alone. “We live in a time of constant input. This piece is about output, clearing space in the mind, making room for reflection,” Vester explains. “It’s not just about how it looks, but how it makes you feel.”
That blend of emotional resonance and clean material honesty places Dream View in a new corner of Scandinavian design. “It still values community, simplicity, function, but it's less quiet. It has presence,” she says. “Design today should address the emotional landscape, not just the physical one,” Vester says. “We need furniture that doesn’t just serve us but supports us.”