Browse

  • Bdbarcelona Haeberli Happyhour Trolley 3
  • Bdbarcelona Haeberli Happyhour Trolley 4
  • Bdbarcelona Haeberli Happyhour Trolley 2
  • Bdbarcelona Haeberli Happyhour Trolley 7
  • Bdbarcelona Haeberli Happyhour Trolley 6
Happyhourtrolley
Bdbarcelona Haeberli Happyhour Trolley Clear1

Happy Hour Trolley

Designer:
Alfredo Häberli
Brand:
BD Barcelona
Make an Enquiry

The Happy Hour series includes the Service bar and Service table serving trolleys. 

“Looking for lost ideas with a cup in one hand, there came to mind simple solutions with little details of invention, around the ‘bar’ theme. A stool to put personal items on, a central table with a whole in the center, another with a rotating surface which opens up to new uses…little stories that can be written on little match boxes.” Alfredo Häberli

43 x 91 x h.73 cm

Chromed iron structure. Heat-shaped ABS trays, painted in textured polyurethane in white matte (RAL 9003) or black (RAL 9005). Back wheels in chromed iron and rubber gasket. Optional lower tray.

The Happy Hour series includes the Service bar and Service table serving trolleys. 

“Looking for lost ideas with a cup in one hand, there came to mind simple solutions with little details of invention, around the ‘bar’ theme. A stool to put personal items on, a central table with a whole in the center, another with a rotating surface which opens up to new uses…little stories that can be written on little match boxes.” Alfredo Häberli

43 x 91 x h.73 cm

Chromed iron structure. Heat-shaped ABS trays, painted in textured polyurethane in white matte (RAL 9003) or black (RAL 9005). Back wheels in chromed iron and rubber gasket. Optional lower tray.

Designer

Alfredo Häberli

Alfredo Häberli successfully combines tradition and renewal with joy and energy, designer for brands such as Moroso, Vitra.

Read More

Brand

BD Barcelona

BD Barcelona Design is the Spanish company with the highest international prestige in design. What, in its foundation in 1972 was an expression of almost insolent rebellion by a group of young, unsatisfied architects, soon became a productive philosophy with a mission to break moulds, even commercial ones.

Read More