Tulip dining table 120 cm, white laminate

Knoll


Colour: White


Knoll
Tulip dining table 120 cm

Buy More, Save More

15% off on orders over $200 with code 15OVER200
20% off on orders over $500 with code 20OVER500
25% off on orders over $1,000 with code 25OVER1000

Offer ends June 15, 2026. Not applicable to gift cards. Cannot be combined with other offers or discounts.


Description

The Tulip table by Eero Saarinen is one if the most well-known pieces of Finnish design. With a name inspired by the table’s one-legged structure that resembles a flower and completed with a round, laminated table top, Tulip is not only a dining table but also an eye-catching design icon.

Saarinen designed the Tulip table in 1957 for the American furniture manufacturer Knoll. The table is part of Saarinen’s Pedestal collection that consists of single-legged furniture created as a protest to the ”ugly, confusing, unrestful world” of traditional furniture legs. The iconic collection exudes an air of mid-century modernism that, to this day, feels fresh and original.

  • Height: 73 cm
  • Diameter: 120 cm

  • Colour White
  • Material Aluminium, laminate
  • Table top material Bevel-edged satin smooth laminate
  • Base material Heavy moulded cast aluminium protected with Rilsan
  • Weight 36 kg
  • Product ID: AK176TR-F2-2

Eero Saarinen

Eero Saarinen (1910–1961) was a Finnish-American architect and designer, known as a pioneer of neo-futurist style and one of the most significant names in modern American architecture. Saarinen rose to fame in 1940 when he and Charles Eames won the Organic Design in Home Furnishings competition, organised by MoMA in New York. His design career continued with pieces such as the Tulip chair and the Womb chair, both now considered classics of modern design.

Among his best-known architectural works are Dulles International Airport in Washington D.C., the Gateway Arch in St. Louis, and the TWA Terminal at John F. Kennedy Airport in New York.

Eero Saarinen – pioneer of modern architecture and design

Eero Saarinen was born in 1910 in Kirkkonummi, Finland, into a creative household: his father was the architect Eliel Saarinen, his mother the textile artist Loja Saarinen. When Eero was 13, the family set sail for the United States and settled in Michigan. A passion for design revealed itself early – as a teenager, he won a Swedish chair design competition.

Saarinen went on to study sculpture in Paris, architecture at the Yale School of Architecture, and design at Michigan's Cranbrook Academy of Art, where he crossed paths with fellow design legend Charles Eames.

A visionary architect

Both Eero and his father Eliel taught at Cranbrook, and together with Robert Swanson they founded the firm Saarinen, Swanson and Associates. In 1950, Eero established his own studio in Michigan, where he worked prolifically for a decade until his untimely death.

His most celebrated architectural works include the TWA Flight Center at New York's JFK Airport, the Dulles International Airport terminal near Washington D.C., and the Gateway Arch in St. Louis – completed posthumously in 1965. Each of these projects combines structural daring with an organic sculptural language that broke decisively from the rigid geometry of conventional modernism.

A new chapter in furniture design

Alongside his architecture, Saarinen left a lasting mark on the world of furniture. In the 1940s, he and Charles Eames entered the Museum of Modern Art's "Organic Design in Home Furnishings" competition – and won.

His collaboration with Knoll produced some of the 20th century's most recognisable pieces: the Womb Chair, introduced in 1948, and the Tulip collection of 1956. With the Tulip series, Saarinen set out to solve what he called the "slum of legs" beneath a table – the result was a family of single-pedestal chairs and tables where form and structure merge into one clean, sculptural whole.

Eero Saarinen in brief

  • Finnish-American architect and designer (1910–1961).
  • Moved to the United States with his family in 1923; his father, Eliel Saarinen, was also an architect.
  • Studied sculpture in Paris and architecture at Yale, graduating in 1934.
  • Known for organic forms and material experimentation across both buildings and furniture.
  • Notable works: Tulip chair (Knoll, 1956), TWA terminal in New York (1962), Gateway Arch in St. Louis (1965).

Read more in Design Stories

View all products

This product doesn't have any reviews yet. Get your own piece of Nordic Happiness and be the first to review it!

This product does not yet have a sustainability rating.
Learn more.

Tulip dining table 120 cm, white laminate

Knoll

Tulip dining table 120 cm

This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate.

Design Stories

More stories

Shipping & Delivery

If all the items in your order are in stock, your order will be dispatched from our warehouse in Finland within two working days. The estimated delivery time is shown on the product pages and at checkout.

The shipping cost is based on the destination, weight, and volume of the shipment and will be calculated automatically. You will see the exact rate, available shipping options and estimated delivery date at checkout once you have filled in your address details.

Please note that your order will be delivered as one full shipment once all the items are in stock.

For orders shipped to non-EU countries (excluding the US, Norway, Switzerland and the UK):

  • Product prices are shown without local taxes or import duties
  • Import duties, taxes and customs fees will be charged by local authorities depending on the destination country.
  • These charges are not included at checkout and are payable by the recipient upon delivery.

All orders are shipped from Finland. For non-EU orders, the country of origin for each product is stated in the shipping documents.

We want you to love your purchase—that’s why we offer 30-day returns.

Please note that the right to return products does not apply to:

  • Custom-made products which are ordered from the manufacturer according to the customer's wishes.
  • Custom-cut items (including fabrics and replacement webbing).

Please note that returns are subject to a restocking fee, which varies depending on your region and the item being returned. The restocking fee will be deducted from the total refund amount.

Please find detailed return instructions and detailed information about return policy here: Returns

Please note that the return policy only applies to private customers.