
The first thing you notice about FLIP is the texture. The BRICKS panels that make up the surface are three-dimensional, each unit raised and grooved in a pattern drawn from the form of actual building bricks. Up close, the natural hemp and flax version has the kind of warm, sandy grain you’d expect to find in a high-end material library rather than a commercial office. The blue rPET version reads more like a dense, structured felt. Both are bold design choices, and neither looks like anything already sitting in a conference room near you.
FLIP is a modular acoustic wall system designed by Anna Vonhausen and Maciej Bidermann for Polish brand VANK, and it earned a Green Product Award 2026 for good reason. The premise is straightforward: instead of installing fixed partitions or accepting the noise chaos of open-plan offices, you build walls that move, reconfigure, and open up exactly when you need them to. The mechanics behind the name are literal. Individual panel segments are hinged so they can pivot open, creating access points within what would otherwise be a solid wall. No door frame required, no architectural work, just a flip.
Designers: Anna Vonhausen & Maciej Bidermann
The modular base system rolls on castors, which means entire configurations can shift whenever a space needs to change. You can build a straight wall, an L-shape, a U-shaped focus nook, or a more enclosed collaborative zone depending on how you connect the screens. The panels link together using a visible horizontal rail system that runs between each row, and those rails do double duty as mounting tracks for a range of black metal accessories. The shelves sit cleanly within the panel grid without protruding awkwardly or breaking the visual rhythm of the wall.
The accessory system is one of the more considered details in the whole design. Small angular shelves clip directly onto the rails and sit flush against the brick surface, giving users a place to rest a lamp, a plant, or whatever makes a temporary workspace feel less temporary. It shifts FLIP from a partition into something closer to a personal environment. The surface is also pin-friendly, meaning the fabric panels pull double duty as a work wall where mood boards, documents, and references can go up without any additional hardware.
The curtain option adds another layer of flexibility. A slim overhead rail can be fitted to the top of certain configurations, suspending a draped curtain that softens the threshold between zones. It doesn’t seal a space off completely, but it creates enough visual and acoustic separation to make a focus nook feel genuinely sheltered rather than just screened. That distinction matters more than it sounds.
On the acoustic side, the three-dimensional surface structure isn’t just decorative. The raised geometry of the BRICKS panels disperses sound waves rather than absorbing them in a single flat plane, achieving a sound absorption coefficient of αw = 0.90. The double-sided construction means both faces of the wall are performing at the same time, and the acoustic performance has been confirmed through scientific modeling rather than just cited on a spec sheet. For a mobile, reconfigurable system, that’s a serious number.
The color range deserves attention too. Natural hemp sits at one end of the palette, a warm sand tone with visible fibre that shifts in different light. At the other end are deep charcoal and vivid yellow rPET options, along with mid-tone grey and a saturated blue. Mixing finishes within a single configuration, which the system fully supports, produces results that look intentional rather than accidental.
FLIP won its award in the Workspace category, but the system is flexible enough to work in retail, hospitality, or any environment that needs fast spatial zoning without permanent construction. Vonhausen and Bidermann built something that performs well, looks even better, and treats the office wall not as background infrastructure but as a designed object worth your full attention. That’s a harder brief to fulfill than it sounds, and FLIP pulls it off.