With Open AIs ChatGPT already setting the internet on fire, no one could possibly deny the scope of CGI and 3D art in the market. The two software are mostly used by budding designers who are looking for a push in their careers and hope their renders go viral. One of these designers is Deniz Aktay whose Bookscrew side table will leave you in absolute awe. Made with the help of CGI, the Bookscrew side table holds the potential of becoming an actual product tomorrow, courtesy of its multifunctional design.

The utterly gorgeous furniture reminds me of The Twist art gallery in Norway designed by BIG architects that twirls “like a deck of cards.” To some extent, this might have been the inspiration behind Deniz’s design too. Thanks to its twisted design, the bookrack turns from vertical to horizontal, with a flat top storing and concealing books in a clever design.

The flat top can also be used to keep your coffee mugs and accessories. The twisted metal frame is poised on steel legs that provide support to the structure.  

“3D designing allows you so much freedom in your creativity which is necessary to come up with new ideas and concepts. Of course, now that I want to see my objects being realized, I need to develop a sense of the possibilities and limits of the technical and manual aspects but I still benefit from the playful and nearly unlimited freedom every time I start designing in 3D,” states Deniz whose creation is the talk of the town.

It’s been a while since we brought some fabulous furniture concepts to your phone screens, but Deniz Aktay’s Bookscrew sideboard stands apart as the epitome of multifunctional design. Despite being a concept as of now, its functionality is so much pleasing that you’d want one in your home. Hopefully, soon it will be.

“I loved the idea of a twisted sideboard to gain different access to your favorite books and highlight them in a special way due to the twisting metal frame. Further, you generate a book rack and a sideboard at once,” tells Deniz.

Also Read: Mura Side Table by STACKLAB is Asymmetrical and Enigmatic

“For me, it was an absolute game-changer to create objects without worrying about realizing them in the real world. As a student I just couldn’t afford to prototype them,” he tells Homecrux. Doubling as a side table, the Bookscrew sideboard is something I’d personally like to see materialized.

Image: Deniz Aktay
Image: Deniz Aktay
Image: Deniz Aktay
Image: Deniz Aktay

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Atish Sharma is a seasoned journalist, theatre director and PR specialist based in Shimla, India. He boasts over eight years of experience in print, electronic, and digital media, and has played pivotal roles as a field journalist at Hindustan Times. When not weaving a web of words at Homecrux or scouring new tiny houses, you'll discover him immersed in cinema, savouring cult classics, interviewing production designers or embarking on a quest for existential truths, far beyond his fantasy of being a cowboy who never rode a horse.

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