Livorno Livorno Dining table - Teak - Teak 400

A solid wooden frame makes for a natural, rustic look. The Livorno table collection offers a variety of dining tables and the ability to combine them with any chair you like.
Features | knock-down | |
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Options | none | |
Number of persons |
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Technical Drawing
Available in
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- Superior quality teak wood (VINIR & HARA) aged 60 to 80 years, sourced from ecological plantations
- Great stability under the effect of UV radiation, chlorine and sea water
- Easy to clean, various specific treatments possible (see p. 298)
- For outdoor and indoor use
- 100% recyclable

Belgian bluestone
Belgian bluestone or “Little Granite” is a limestone with a more or less pronounced natural blue/grey colour, which is characterized by the presence of a large number of fossilised crinoids. This type of bluestone is only quarried in Belgium.
- It develops a natural patina
Use: outdoors, changes due to the action of rain and UV-rays to its original pale blue-grey colour
Use: indoors in the course of time, it develops a deeper colour - Bluestone is susceptible to products and scratches
- Belgian bluestone can often contain a number of white veins1, black lines, spots and fossils2
- Depending on the finishing, the stone has a different look
1 “White veins“ are water veins, formed by water, 100% specific to bluestone and are not cracks as people often assume.
2 Fossils and colour differences: stone is a natural material formed by different perfectly petrified fossils. So it is normal to find nests of crustaceans in the stone.
In other words, even in one sheet of stone clear differences in colour can be observed.
BLUESTONE text is based on a publication by the WTCB (Wetenschappelijk en Technisch Centrum voor het Bouwbedrijf)
- Building Industry Scientific and Technical Centre

Belgian bluestone
Belgian bluestone or “Little Granite” is a limestone with a more or less pronounced natural blue/grey colour, which is characterized by the presence of a large number of fossilised crinoids. This type of bluestone is only quarried in Belgium.
- It develops a natural patina
Use: outdoors, changes due to the action of rain and UV-rays to its original pale blue-grey colour
Use: indoors in the course of time, it develops a deeper colour - Bluestone is susceptible to products and scratches
- Belgian bluestone can often contain a number of white veins1, black lines, spots and fossils2
- Depending on the finishing, the stone has a different look
1 “White veins“ are water veins, formed by water, 100% specific to bluestone and are not cracks as people often assume.
2 Fossils and colour differences: stone is a natural material formed by different perfectly petrified fossils. So it is normal to find nests of crustaceans in the stone.
In other words, even in one sheet of stone clear differences in colour can be observed.
BLUESTONE text is based on a publication by the WTCB (Wetenschappelijk en Technisch Centrum voor het Bouwbedrijf)
- Building Industry Scientific and Technical Centre

Belgian bluestone
Belgian bluestone or “Little Granite” is a limestone with a more or less pronounced natural blue/grey colour, which is characterized by the presence of a large number of fossilised crinoids. This type of bluestone is only quarried in Belgium.
- It develops a natural patina
Use: outdoors, changes due to the action of rain and UV-rays to its original pale blue-grey colour
Use: indoors in the course of time, it develops a deeper colour - Bluestone is susceptible to products and scratches
- Belgian bluestone can often contain a number of white veins1, black lines, spots and fossils2
- Depending on the finishing, the stone has a different look
1 “White veins“ are water veins, formed by water, 100% specific to bluestone and are not cracks as people often assume.
2 Fossils and colour differences: stone is a natural material formed by different perfectly petrified fossils. So it is normal to find nests of crustaceans in the stone.
In other words, even in one sheet of stone clear differences in colour can be observed.
BLUESTONE text is based on a publication by the WTCB (Wetenschappelijk en Technisch Centrum voor het Bouwbedrijf)
- Building Industry Scientific and Technical Centre

Belgian bluestone
Belgian bluestone or “Little Granite” is a limestone with a more or less pronounced natural blue/grey colour, which is characterized by the presence of a large number of fossilised crinoids. This type of bluestone is only quarried in Belgium.
- It develops a natural patina
Use: outdoors, changes due to the action of rain and UV-rays to its original pale blue-grey colour
Use: indoors in the course of time, it develops a deeper colour - Bluestone is susceptible to products and scratches
- Belgian bluestone can often contain a number of white veins1, black lines, spots and fossils2
- Depending on the finishing, the stone has a different look
1 “White veins“ are water veins, formed by water, 100% specific to bluestone and are not cracks as people often assume.
2 Fossils and colour differences: stone is a natural material formed by different perfectly petrified fossils. So it is normal to find nests of crustaceans in the stone.
In other words, even in one sheet of stone clear differences in colour can be observed.
BLUESTONE text is based on a publication by the WTCB (Wetenschappelijk en Technisch Centrum voor het Bouwbedrijf)
- Building Industry Scientific and Technical Centre

Belgian bluestone
Belgian bluestone or “Little Granite” is a limestone with a more or less pronounced natural blue/grey colour, which is characterized by the presence of a large number of fossilised crinoids. This type of bluestone is only quarried in Belgium.
- It develops a natural patina
Use: outdoors, changes due to the action of rain and UV-rays to its original pale blue-grey colour
Use: indoors in the course of time, it develops a deeper colour - Bluestone is susceptible to products and scratches
- Belgian bluestone can often contain a number of white veins1, black lines, spots and fossils2
- Depending on the finishing, the stone has a different look
1 “White veins“ are water veins, formed by water, 100% specific to bluestone and are not cracks as people often assume.
2 Fossils and colour differences: stone is a natural material formed by different perfectly petrified fossils. So it is normal to find nests of crustaceans in the stone.
In other words, even in one sheet of stone clear differences in colour can be observed.
BLUESTONE text is based on a publication by the WTCB (Wetenschappelijk en Technisch Centrum voor het Bouwbedrijf)
- Building Industry Scientific and Technical Centre

Belgian bluestone
Belgian bluestone or “Little Granite” is a limestone with a more or less pronounced natural blue/grey colour, which is characterized by the presence of a large number of fossilised crinoids. This type of bluestone is only quarried in Belgium.
- It develops a natural patina
Use: outdoors, changes due to the action of rain and UV-rays to its original pale blue-grey colour
Use: indoors in the course of time, it develops a deeper colour - Bluestone is susceptible to products and scratches
- Belgian bluestone can often contain a number of white veins1, black lines, spots and fossils2
- Depending on the finishing, the stone has a different look
1 “White veins“ are water veins, formed by water, 100% specific to bluestone and are not cracks as people often assume.
2 Fossils and colour differences: stone is a natural material formed by different perfectly petrified fossils. So it is normal to find nests of crustaceans in the stone.
In other words, even in one sheet of stone clear differences in colour can be observed.
BLUESTONE text is based on a publication by the WTCB (Wetenschappelijk en Technisch Centrum voor het Bouwbedrijf)
- Building Industry Scientific and Technical Centre

Belgian bluestone
Belgian bluestone or “Little Granite” is a limestone with a more or less pronounced natural blue/grey colour, which is characterized by the presence of a large number of fossilised crinoids. This type of bluestone is only quarried in Belgium.
- It develops a natural patina
Use: outdoors, changes due to the action of rain and UV-rays to its original pale blue-grey colour
Use: indoors in the course of time, it develops a deeper colour - Bluestone is susceptible to products and scratches
- Belgian bluestone can often contain a number of white veins1, black lines, spots and fossils2
- Depending on the finishing, the stone has a different look
1 “White veins“ are water veins, formed by water, 100% specific to bluestone and are not cracks as people often assume.
2 Fossils and colour differences: stone is a natural material formed by different perfectly petrified fossils. So it is normal to find nests of crustaceans in the stone.
In other words, even in one sheet of stone clear differences in colour can be observed.
BLUESTONE text is based on a publication by the WTCB (Wetenschappelijk en Technisch Centrum voor het Bouwbedrijf)
- Building Industry Scientific and Technical Centre

Belgian bluestone
Belgian bluestone or “Little Granite” is a limestone with a more or less pronounced natural blue/grey colour, which is characterized by the presence of a large number of fossilised crinoids. This type of bluestone is only quarried in Belgium.
- It develops a natural patina
Use: outdoors, changes due to the action of rain and UV-rays to its original pale blue-grey colour
Use: indoors in the course of time, it develops a deeper colour - Bluestone is susceptible to products and scratches
- Belgian bluestone can often contain a number of white veins1, black lines, spots and fossils2
- Depending on the finishing, the stone has a different look
1 “White veins“ are water veins, formed by water, 100% specific to bluestone and are not cracks as people often assume.
2 Fossils and colour differences: stone is a natural material formed by different perfectly petrified fossils. So it is normal to find nests of crustaceans in the stone.
In other words, even in one sheet of stone clear differences in colour can be observed.
BLUESTONE text is based on a publication by the WTCB (Wetenschappelijk en Technisch Centrum voor het Bouwbedrijf)
- Building Industry Scientific and Technical Centre
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