NE@T eco and Eidos Pro: Two Paths, One Shared Vision for the Modern Office
- Style Essentials Edit Team

- Sep 8
- 2 min read

The workplace has changed. What was once a grid of identical desks now feels more like a living organism, shaped by the way people interact, pause, focus, or share ideas. The desk, in particular, is no longer a neutral slab but a tool that influences how we think, move, and connect.
Newform Ufficio has been watching this shift closely. Their answer comes in two directions—NE@T eco, created with Progetto CMR, and Eidos Pro, designed for the hybrid rhythm of today’s office. Different in character, yet both carry a similar intent: to make the office less rigid, more human, and much more responsive to daily life.




NE@T eco leans towards openness. Its design borrows from desk-sharing culture, stripping away barriers so that the workstation doubles as a meeting ground. Colleagues can drift into conversation without the awkwardness of walls or partitions. Sizes vary, legs come in either wood or metal, and every choice hints at flexibility. What stands out most, though, is the attention to comfort—stations built to support posture and prevent the slump that long hours bring.
Eidos Pro takes the opposite angle. Here, the individual is at the centre. Its defining gesture is the height-adjustable surface, shifting smoothly from 62 to 128 cm, whether by manual or electric control. This simple feature transforms the desk into something far more generous—it adapts to mood, energy, or need. Sit, stand, lean, return again. The design respects the stop-and-go rhythm of a working day while keeping the space clean, orderly, and focused.
Put side by side, the two systems read like siblings: one extroverted, eager to spark collaboration, the other introspective, built for focus and personal flow. Together, they sketch a vision of the modern office not as a fixed landscape but as a flexible ecosystem.
With NE@T eco and Eidos Pro, Newform Ufficio suggests a quiet truth: the freedom to choose how we work is as important as the work itself.
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