THE ONE × Kibo — Steel and Oak Media Console
Some consoles just hold electronics.
This one holds a conversation — steel and oak, raw and refined, French industrial meeting Brutalist soul.
Elongated oak frame. Sculptural metal doors.
A statement piece that doesn't shout — it commands.
Inside: ample storage, discreet cord cutouts.
83 inches of intention.
For the living room that knows what it wants.
For the home that collects design, not just furniture.
But here's what most people miss: the sculptural metal doors aren't flat — they're shaped. Each steel door is pressed with a subtle, three‑dimensional relief that catches light differently throughout the day. Morning light hits one way. Evening light another. The doors appear to change. And the elongated oak frame extends beyond the metal — oak wrapping steel — so the warm wood contains the cool metal. Raw and refined, held together.
You're not buying a media console. You're buying a piece of French industrial sculpture — Brutalist soul wrapped in warm oak — that happens to hide your cables.
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The Hidden Gems
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· Elongated oak frame extends beyond the metal doors — the oak wraps around the steel, containing it. Warm wood. Cool metal. The contrast is the point.
· Sculptural metal doors with polished pewter finish — not flat. Not smooth. The steel is pressed with subtle relief, creating shadows and highlights that shift as you move across the room.
· French industrial meets Brutalist soul — two architectural movements that celebrated raw materials and honest construction. French industrial brought the steel. Brutalism brought the weight. Kibo brings both.
· Steel doors appear to change with the light — because the relief is subtle. In low light, the doors read as flat. In direct light, the texture emerges. Most people will never notice. You will.
· Solid oak and oak veneer — the solid wood is in the frame, where strength matters. The veneer is on the interior surfaces, where stability matters. Smart construction. No compromises.
· 83 inches wide — nearly seven feet. Long enough to anchor the longest wall. Long enough to hold the largest television. Long enough that the conversation starts before anyone sits down.
· Cord management cutouts are discreet — placed at the back, out of sight. Your cables disappear. Your console stays clean.
· A statement piece that doesn't shout — it commands — because shouting is insecure. Kibo doesn't need to shout. It's 83 inches of oak and steel. The scale does the talking.
· For the living room that knows what it wants — and what it wants is a console that holds electronics but feels like sculpture. French industrial. Brutalist soul. Oak wrapping steel.
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What You Should Know
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· Designed Exclusively for THE ONE
· Oak and oak veneer — warm, enduring, naturally textured.
· Steel with polished pewter finish — sculptural, refined, industrial.
· Sculptural metal doors — pressed relief, catches light throughout the day.
· Elongated oak frame — wraps around the metal, containing it.
· Cord management — clean, discreet.
· 83" width — generous scale for media and storage.
· French industrial + Brutalist inspirations — raw meets refined.
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For the Living Room That Knows
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For the wall that needs 83 inches of oak and steel — raw materials, refined together.
For the home that collects design, not just furniture — where a media console is also a sculpture, and the conversation starts before anyone sits down.
For the quiet pride of owning a piece where the steel doors change with the light — and the oak frame holds them both.
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Another layer of calm — from THE ONE.