Way of Life – The Sessile, London

Table Crafted from Reimagined Materials

How do we reimagine the value of waste?

That question sits at the heart of our practice, and we found a new answer in our recent collaboration for Way of Life’s second property in Tottenham Hale, London – The Sessile.

In partnership with The Furniture Practice and designer Linda Boronkay, we created a sculptural table that acts as the centrepiece for the yoga studio’s welcome area. More than just a beautiful piece of furniture, it’s a statement — a quiet manifesto — for how brands, designers and makers can work together to reframe the narrative around waste.

What began as a collection of by-products — bottle tops and other material fragments often overlooked or discarded — has been transformed into something enduring. We treat each project as a form of material storytelling. This approach allows us to extract design value from unexpected places, embedding meaning into every surface. The materials are not merely decorative; they carry with them a memory of use, context and place.

The colour palette — soft pale yellows, deep aubergine tones, off-whites and flecks of lavender — was developed in conversation with the studio’s broader interior scheme. Linda’s vision, full of warmth and textural interplay, gave us the opportunity to push what our materials can do both visually and technically. The resulting finish evokes something organic, almost geological — a kind of terrazzo dreamscape that anchors the studio’s natural light and soft wood textures.

What The Sessile had to say

Way of Life described the project in their own editorial as “a bold and inspiring approach to contemporary wellness spaces — layered, conscious and unmistakably calm.” This aligned closely with our mission: to prove that luxury and sustainability don’t just coexist — they can elevate each other.

Working with The Furniture Practice was equally rewarding. As longstanding champions of sustainable interiors and design-forward thinking, they understood our vision immediately. This project is a great example of the power of collaborative work — where architects, designers and material-makers co-create solutions that resonate aesthetically and ethically.

The end result

We designed and crafted the table with permanence in mind: to make something fixed, enduring, and regenerative from waste materials that would otherwise be transient. As the name Sessile suggests — referencing grounded organisms like corals or lichens — this piece is rooted in place and purpose. It speaks to a kind of stillness that feels especially relevant in a wellness setting: a reminder that design can offer calm, connection and circularity in a world of constant flux.

Every piece we create is a one-off. There is no standardised colour palette, no formula — just a deep and evolving relationship with material, process and possibility. We believe waste should be treated not as a liability, but as a luxury — one that reveals new aesthetic languages and unexpected beauty.

This project reflects a wider shift happening across the design world — where environmental intelligence and material experimentation meet craft and care. If this is the new luxury, we’re proud to be part of it.

Press Highlights

“It’s a gentle, generous, materially rich space — full of unexpected details.” — Design Anthology, on Way of Life’s interior vision.

“Linda Boronkay’s Little Black Book” — The Standard, featuring Spared as one of her top London creative studios.

“Recycled yet Refined” — Eclectic Trends, spotlighting our material innovation using client waste.

Want to turn waste into wonderful – drop us a line.

Close up of a table made with recycled plastic by Spared - the sessile london
The Sessile London, sustainable furniture design
a table made with recycled plastic by Spared - the sessile london
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