Riki Watanabe / Solid Stool
Riki Watanabe / Solid Stool
Stool with Elegant Form Combining Oak and Steel
The Solid Stool was designed by Riki Watanabe as a compact stool for the entryway. Watanabe, who designed furniture for Kiyoshi Seike’s “Mathematician’s House” (1954, Meguro, Tokyo), created this piece during a time when most furniture in Japan was custom-made, with few ready-made options available. While it attracted attention in various settings, including a photography studio waiting room and the Modern Living Exhibition at Takashimaya, it was not commercially produced until 2005, when METROCS faithfully revived it over half a century later.
The combination of a solid oak seat and steel rod legs creates a linear, refined form reminiscent of Watanabe’s celebrated Tri Stool (1957), which won the first gold medal for a Japanese designer at the Milan Triennale.
The seat’s gentle slope reflects Watanabe’s intent to provide greater comfort than a flat seat. Between the two wooden boards, a small handhold is subtly incorporated for easy portability—an example of the meticulous attention to detail that defines its minimalist beauty.
The collaboration between architect Kiyoshi Seike and designer Riki Watanabe continued for many projects, including the Prince Hotel, producing a series of iconic works in Japanese modern design.
Brand | METROCS
Designer | Riki Watanabe
Year of Design | 1954
Dimentions
Dimentions
W 430 x D 300 x H 420 mm
Weight : 3.8 kg
Materials
Materials
Leg : steel rod (Φ 10mm)
Seat : Solid wood (Thickness 20mm)
Lead time
Lead time
ships in 2–3 days
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METROCS
METROCS is a furniture brand established in Japan in 2002, passing masterpiece design items to future generations. Collaborated with designers and their foundations, we revive and commercialize historical design products. Our mission is to discover buried “truly high-quality product”, and pass its ingenuity, sincerity and stories hidden in the materials, parts and construction method, down in perpetuity.

Riki Watanabe [1911-2013]
Born in Tokyo, graduated from the Woodcraft Departmentat Tokyo Higher School of Arts and Design (now Chiba University) in 1936, and after joined Gunma Prefecture Industrial Arts Center under the direction of Bruno Taut, established his own design office in 1949. He got famous with the low-cost String Chair "Himo Chair" in 1952. In 1956, he formed the Q-designers, which brought about reforms in the early days of after-war Japanese design by inventing the "Torii Stool" and the "Riki Stool," among others. In his later years, he focused on clock design, and the "Riki Clock," named after his own name and released in 2003, became his masterpiece.