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WONDER CLUB House by Berry Dijkstra

In the Cohousing building Ten Broele, Dutch composition artist Berry Dijkstra brings together nine Belgian design companies and eleven designers in a layered installation in which material, form and vision reinforce each other. He composes still lifes with objects and furniture, seeks balance and dialogue, and shows that design is fun! WONDER CLUB, powered by Designregio Kortrijk, unites strong brands and creators around innovation, collaboration and future-oriented design. With the support of the Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in Belgium.

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Participating companies and designers

Berry Dijkstra Nummers

BLUE LABEL (01)
From recycled bottles to poetic design. PETFelt is an acoustic element with the soft look of felt – sustainable, expressive and refined. For WONDER, it takes shape as a monumental gate with two pillars: a circular statement in which aesthetics and acoustics meet.

PIA MANU (19)
In Pia Manu’s studio, fire is the incentive to each design. This coffee table blends ceramics and tin into a distinctive design, created with care in the workshop. The stoves - such as the Stûv30c and the Elvas – radiate that same fiery craftsmanship and bespoke artistry.

PRO PROJECTS (18)
With Polycoat and Polynature, Pro Projects sets the tone for sustainable refinement. Polycoat stands for pure strength: fibre-reinforced, waterproof and indestructible. Polynature adds the warm look of polished concrete or tadelakt, but without their limitations. Together they represent the next evolution in seamless bathrooms: sleek, durable and hygienic.

CASALIS (05)
Casalis softens spaces with textiles that are both functional and refined. From rugs to acoustic panels and seating pieces: each creation is tailormade, with attention to colour, texture and sustainability. From top designers collections emerge that bring about silence, comfort and character. Let our textiles embrace you.

WEVER & DUCRÉ (07)
With HAJO 1.0 designer Serge Cornelissen brings a spiral of finely grooved glass to life. Whether beside a bathroom mirror or in a restaurant, this design statement blends functionality with warmth and character. Now part of the Wever & Ducré collection, a Belgian brand where creativity meets high-quality lighting design.

JATI KEBON (06)
Jati Kebon designs outdoor furniture that feels as impressive as it looks. The Reno collection expresses this through gentle curves, durable materials, and all-weather comfort. The Elko bench, in turn, surprises with its sleek silhouette and versatile character. Together, they show how comfort and luxury can go so well together, even outdoors.

ARLU (15)
ARLU infuses every space with architectural finesse. The Divina glass partitions divide rooms without losing light, offering a sleek interplay of glass and aluminium. Invisidoor Arched adds a subtle curve that flows seamlessly into the wall. Timeless, elegant, and quietly striking.

MODULAR LIGHTING INSTRUMENTS (16)
Light that speaks, shapes that touch. Extruded Stripped catches shadow and glance in its vertical ribs. Gamin spreads a warm glow and sets the mood. And Straw levitates linear light to a new dimension with its slender cylinder form: minimalistic, modular, and versatile.

BRACHOT (04)
Embark on a journey through luxurious marbles, each with its own character and creative finish. Brachot is a specialist in natural stone and composite materials such as ceramics, quartz composite and terrazzo. With 125 years of craftsmanship, innovation, and sustainable production, the company creates materials that give every space this extra dimension.

Participating designers

ANTONINO TRIOLO (20)
Visual artist Antonino Triolo tells stories through lines, shapes, and clay. His powerful images balance between fiction and history, drawing inspiration from myths, dreams, and folklore. Rooted in his Sicilian heritage and figurative style, each work becomes an expressive piece of storytelling.

AURÉLIEN VEYRAT (02)
To Aurélien Veyrat, every brick marks a new beginning. He collects old pieces, dissects them to their core and reshapes them into new forms. What once were remnants become sculptures – columns, towers, and fragments, in which texture, colour and history form a whole new narrative.

HÉLÈNE DEL MARMOL (17)
Hélène del Marmol is a designer, but above all, she’s a maker, transforming materials into three-dimensional objects rich in graphic geometry. Working with wax, for instance, she creates pieces that invite interaction, and where emotion and memory outweigh functionality.

LETO ERIN KEUNEN (13)
Through her installations, Leto Erin Keunen explores how objects shape our social and spatial relationships. In Hanger / Carrier, she literally pours that idea into a mould: a clothes hanger of molten aluminium in which the traces of its making remain visible. An every day object as such becomes a vessel for meaning, carrying stories of wearing, holding and vulnerability.

MERLIJN TROCH (09)
Furniture designer Merlijn Troch combines craftsmanship with boldness and expression. His Dancing Chairs are made from an old dance floor: wood that finds new rhythm through cutting, burning and vivid colour. Each piece moves differently. A playful encounter between art and functionality.

MINJUNG KIM (14)
Brussels-based textile designer Minjung Kim explores the emotional and sensory power of woven materials. Her woven covers wrap around furniture and objects, giving them personality and bringing warmth to temporary spaces. MEUS is her way of evoking a sense of home – in any place.

PAUL SCHAFFEL (08)
Paul Schaffer combines textiles, graphic design and research, guided by a sharp eye for the world surrounding him. His work balances between humour and philosophy, between colour and critique. Turbulence is a tapestry born from an experimental knitting process, making the chaos and coincidence of our time truly tangible.

REBECCA ACKAERT (03)
Belgian interior architect Rebecca Ackaert likes to explore the boundary between intuition and precision. Inspired by Japanese wood joinery, she plays with contrasts between refinement and rawness. Her first steel collection approaches an industrial material with a remarkably gentle touch.

RUTGER DE REGT (12)
As a material-based designer Rutger de Regt lets industrial materials speak beyond their traditional context. Through intuitive low-tech techniques, he creates architectural structures filled with tension and balance. His work explores the way material, body, and environment continuously interact, opening new perspectives on the act of making.

SEPPE DOMBRECHT (11)
Brussels-based artist Seppe Dombrecht reworks everyday objects into something unexpected. With a curious eye for form, function, and use, he transforms them into sculptures that feel both unexpected and familiar. His work invites us to look again at what surrounds us.

XAVIER SERVAS (10)
In his Brussels studio Xavier Servas breathes life into a goldbeater’s skin, an exceptionally thin and translucent animal membrane that he creates himself. From this fragile material, pneumatic structures emerge that move, glow, and breathe. His work balances between tradition and technology, between lightness and form, between air and life.

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