The Eames Pavilion System Reimagines Prefab Living
Unveiled at the Triennale Milano during Milan Design Week.
Summary
- The Eames Houses exhibition at Triennale Milano debuted the Eames Pavilion System, a modular, prefabricated architecture concept
- Full‑scale pavilion installations and archival materials showcased Charles and Ray’s architectural legacy
- Accompanied by Phaidon’s sourcebook, reinforcing architecture as central to the Eames vision
Presented during Milan Design Week 2026, the Eames Office unveiled The Eames Houses at the Triennale Milano, an expansive 800-square-meter exhibition that reexamines the architectural legacy of Charles and Ray Eames. Grounded in extensive archival research, the showcase places full-scale, walk-in installations alongside a wealth of previously unseen drawings, models, and studies from the Eames Office Archive. The initiative marks a significant effort to shift public perception of the Eameses’ work from purely furniture design to a foundational systemic architectural thinking that views buildings not as static objects, but as flexible backgrounds for life.
A central highlight of the exhibition is the global debut of the Eames Pavilion System, a modular construction kit developed in partnership with the Barcelona-based manufacturer Kettal. Translating the designers’ 1940s and 1950s architectural principles into a contemporary engineered product, the system utilizes a rational grid and repeatable structural modules to maximize volume within a small footprint.
Designed for adaptability, the system supports configurations ranging from compact 16‑square‑meter pavilions to two‑story houses, with applications across residential, hospitality, workplace, and exhibition contexts. Its use of recyclable aluminum, engineered decking, bioclimatic roofs, and integrated lighting reflects both sustainability and technological innovation, while remaining unmistakably Eames in spirit.
Coinciding with the exhibition, a namesake sourcebook published by Phaidon was released, further establishing Charles and Ray’s vision for modular, prefabricated living as a living expression of their design values. Authored by Eckart Maise with contributions from Catherine Ince and forewords by Norman Foster and Eames Demetrios, the book documents built and unbuilt projects from 1945 to 1954, situating architecture as a continuous thread in the Eames legacy.




















