Product Details
Comfort & Functionality
The LC10 offers a generous surface area suitable for dining or meeting use, with its transparent glass version creating a light, floating impression. The simple geometry and lightweight construction make the table easy to integrate into various interiors. Surfaces are easy to clean and durable under daily use, while the balanced frame ensures stability on different floor types.
Materials & Finish
The LC10 Dining Table combines a tubular steel frame with square-profile legs in polished chrome, resistant to scratches and corrosion. The tabletop is available in clear tempered glass or in lacquered surfaces, offering a refined modernist appearance. The contrasting steel and glass highlight Le Corbusier’s vision of structural transparency and material honesty.
Construction
The table frame is built from tubular steel crossbars, mechanically joined to the four square-profile legs. Precision welding and polished finishing ensure rigidity and visual clarity. The tempered glass top rests on discrete rubber supports integrated into the frame, providing stability while preventing direct contact between glass and steel. Alternative tabletops in lacquered finishes are equally secured with concealed fittings.
Size and Packaging of the Product
Product Dimensions
The four feet must be screwed into the base frame.
The glass top is then placed on the assembled base
Box Dimensions
packed in 3 Box
(20x20x70cm for feet missing on drawing)
Le Corbusier
Le Corbusier (1887–1965), born Charles-Édouard Jeanneret-Gris in Switzerland, was a pioneering architect, urban planner, and designer, widely regarded as a master of modernism. He developed radical ideas of functional, rational architecture, emphasizing light, proportion, and open space. His influential works include the Villa Savoye in France, the Unité d’Habitation in Marseille, and the city plan for Chandigarh, India. Le Corbusier also designed iconic furniture pieces, such as the LC2 and LC4, in collaboration with Pierre Jeanneret and Charlotte Perriand. Advocating the “machine for living” philosophy, he reshaped architectural thought and left a lasting global legacy in modern design.
















