If you have ever traveled on Continental Airlines and visited certain cities, you may have lounged on the furniture Mike designed for the waiting areas. He designs seating for public places in Paris and New York City, and office furniture which sells internationally and in the United States. Mike's office designs reveal his ingenuity, innovation, and passion for the practical. There is the Quadrio seating designed by Mike, who thinks of large pieces of furniture as "small scale architecture." The Quadrio refers to architecture, with its columns supporting the end cushions, which resemble the architrave1 of a building. It's a sofa that can be reconfigured easily to two individual seats by simply moving the arms and supports to the center and pushing the bottom cushions to the outside.
The "Bulldog" office chair, which looks very simple in structure, actually has 200 parts, but it's very functional and flexible. The chair's many moving parts can be adjusted and adapted to offer comfort and optimum back support to the individual office workers who use it. It is a complex ergonomic machine that has a simple, elegant look. Over a million of these chairs have been produced and sold since Mike got the patent and licensed Knoll, an office furniture company, to make them.
Another example of Mike and Kathy's "simplify and make functional" concept is the office and work space that they designed for the president of the Formica Corporation for his office at company headquarters in Warren, New Jersey. His original office was filled with wood paneling and the usual wooden chairs and desks. But the executive had back problems, which made sitting difficult for him, and thus he liked to work standing up. In the McCoy's new interior design, all of the wood was replaced by innovative furnishings which incorporated Formica products.
THE CONVENTIONAL DESKS and chairs were replaced by work station counters at appropriate heights for standing and moving as well as sitting. The executive's computer equipment was enclosed in a computer garage, and the interior design capitalized on the building's spectacular views of the New Jersey hills and forests.