The briccola is a structure made by 2 or 3 oak trunks strung together and placed in the sea to mark the navigable channels through the Venice lagoon.
Although the oak is very resistant, their permanence in the sea shapes each briccola in a unique way. The resulting dissimilarities account for the surplus value of the briccola wood.
This is the asset that the table will take advantage of. Despite the making process and the steel structure are always the same, every table is a unique piece.
Every wooden elements are obtained from just one briccola to reduce the production waste and all the pieces be fixed on a rough iron structure that remains soberly visible.