This Trolley Stacks and Rotates Like Shipping Containers at a Port - Yanko Design
Briefly

This Trolley Stacks and Rotates Like Shipping Containers at a Port - Yanko Design
"Most storage furniture sits where you put it, fixed shelves and cabinets that do their job but rarely respond to how space changes during a day. Trolleys help with mobility, but they often feel generic, more utility than character. Harbor 051 is a storage trolley that borrows its logic from a place built entirely around movement and stacking, Busan Port, where containers shift and cranes swing in a constant choreography."
"The trolley consists of four container-like boxes stacked on a wheeled base, each able to pivot around a central axis. In a narrow hallway or next to a desk, you keep them aligned as a compact tower. When you settle on the sofa or work at a table, you swing modules out to the side, opening up access to books or supplies without taking over the floor."
"A vertical mast rises from the top, capped with a horizontal beam that doubles as a light. It reads like a tiny crane or gantry, giving the trolley a clear front and sense of direction. In a living room, that light becomes a reading lamp or soft ambient glow, while the mast acts as a subtle signpost, a little landmark instead of anonymous storage hiding in a corner."
"The colors are pulled directly from Busan and its port. Yellow comes from cranes and working equipment, navy and blue from the sea in front of and beyond the harbor, and red from the camellia flower that represents the city. In practice, that means a base of deep blue containers, a bright yellow mast, or a red top module bringing energy into an otherwise neutral space."
Harbor 051 adapts the stacking logic and motion of Busan Port into a domestic storage trolley. It comprises four container-like boxes stacked on a wheeled base, each pivoting around a central axis to switch between compact tower and spread-out access. A vertical mast capped by a horizontal beam functions as a light and a directional signpost, resembling a small crane. The color palette references cranes, sea, and the camellia: deep blue base, bright yellow mast, and an energetic red top module. Designers are Ho joong Lee and Ho taek Lee. The design emphasizes mobility, rhythm, and visual character.
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