Overview
Description
Specifications
Delivery & Returns
FAQs
Knowledge Hub
No legs. All texture. All concrete.
A ridged side table in green glass fibre reinforced concrete. 400mm square, 450mm tall, 22.5 kg. Bold vertical ridges run the full height, creating shadow lines that shift as daylight moves. A sectioned geometric top echoes the ridging beneath. The green GFRC finish carries the colour through the material rather than sitting on top as a coating. No assembly. No legs. One continuous sculptural column of reinforced concrete, ready to position the moment it arrives.
What the ridged column changes.
- It adds sculpture beside the sofa: The vertical ridges and legless form give this table a presence that flat-sided alternatives cannot match.
- It introduces a mineral the room lacked: Between linen, timber and upholstery, GFRC adds cool tactile weight that soft furnishings cannot provide.
- It brings colour through concrete: Green GFRC is unusual. The muted, earthy tone works as an accent without the brightness of paint or the neutrality of grey.
- It changes with the light: Ridges cast deeper shadows in direct sun and soften under lamplight, giving a single-material surface a tonal range it earns through form.
- It anchors without moving: At 22.5 kg the table sits where placed and does not shift when a glass is set down or a book rested against it.
- It arrives finished: No assembly, no tools. Position with two people and the table is ready.
Rooms that need one bold element.
Beside a deep-olive or charcoal sofa where the green connects through tone. Against white walls where the ridged column becomes the room's single accent. In a hallway beside a dark-timber console and a brass-framed mirror where it holds keys with sculptural weight. In a bedroom with warm-neutral linen where the concrete adds the one hard, architectural element the scheme needed. For ideas on introducing textural accents into warm-toned rooms, our kitchen organisation guide covers how considered statement pieces work alongside everyday furnishings.
The surface is the whole structure.
Most side tables separate the surface from the structure. A top sits on legs. This table does not work that way. There are no legs. The entire form is a single column of glass fibre reinforced concrete, 400mm square and 450mm tall, with a bold vertical ridge pattern running the full height and a sectioned top that divides the surface into a geometric grid. The ridges are the structure. The texture is the design. The green finish carries the colour through the material rather than sitting on top of it.
At 22.5 kg the weight is substantial. It sits where you place it and does not shift when a drink is set down. The glass fibre reinforcement gives the concrete tensile strength without brittleness, which means the ridged surface handles daily contact, occasional knocks and the general business of a table that lives beside a sofa or a bed.
No assembly required. It arrives as a finished piece. The green tone is unusual for concrete furniture, which defaults to grey or white. This one commits to colour and makes it work through the depth of the GFRC material. For a lamp that introduces a contrasting organic texture beside the ridged concrete, the Natural Wriggle Touch Table Lamp creates a pairing that balances the mineral with the tactile.
What the concrete column delivers.
- Glass fibre reinforced concrete. GFRC is lighter and stronger than poured concrete. The green colour is integral to the material rather than a coating that can chip or peel.
- Bold vertical ridge pattern. Ridges run the full height, creating shadow lines that change depth as the light moves. They give the table a sculptural presence flat surfaces lack.
- Sectioned top surface. The top divides into a geometric grid echoing the vertical ridging. It adds visual interest from above and holds objects in place on the textured surface.
- 400 x 400 x 450mm. A compact square footprint that fits beside a sofa arm, a bed or in an alcove. The 450mm height matches most sofa-arm and mattress-top levels.
- 22.5 kg, no assembly. Arrives as a single finished piece. Two people recommended for positioning. No tools, no hardware.
- Green GFRC finish. A muted, earthy green that works alongside warm neutrals, dark timber, brass and deep-toned upholstery without competing.
Why ridges outperform smooth surfaces.
A smooth concrete side table is a block. It has presence and weight, but it gives the eye nothing to follow once the first impression lands. Ridges change that. They create vertical shadow lines that shift in depth as the room's light changes through the day. In direct sunlight the shadows are sharp and defined. Under lamplight they soften into gradations that give the surface a warmth it would not otherwise carry. The ridged form also makes the green finish work harder: the colour appears darker in the recesses and lighter on the raised edges, producing a tonal range from a single material that a flat surface could never achieve.
Where green concrete earns its place.
Beside a deep olive or charcoal sofa on a warm timber floor, the green GFRC connects to the palette through tone rather than matching directly. The ridged texture introduces a mineral quality that contrasts with upholstery and wood. Against white walls, the green column becomes the room's accent piece without needing anything else. In a hallway with a dark console and a brass-framed mirror, it provides a surface for keys and a candle with sculptural weight. In a bedroom beside a low bed with linen in warm neutrals, the ridged concrete adds the one hard, architectural element that stops the room feeling too soft.
Before it goes into position.
- Weight: 22.5 kg. Two people recommended for carrying and positioning. Measure doorways and turns between the front door and the final location. Once placed, the weight anchors the table firmly.
- Dimensions: 400 x 400 x 450mm. The 400mm square base fits beside most sofa arms and alongside standard UK single and double beds. Allow clearance on all sides for the ridged texture to be visible rather than pressed against a wall.
- Surface care. Wipe with a damp cloth. The GFRC surface is sealed but not coated. Avoid abrasive cleaners. Minor variations in tone and texture across the ridged surface are inherent to the material and part of its character.
Delivery
| Service | Timescale | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Standard | 3-5 working days | Free |
| Next working day | Order before 4pm | £5.95 |
UK mainland only. Orders placed on weekends or bank holidays are dispatched the next working day.
We are unable to deliver to Northern Ireland, the Scottish Isles, Jersey, Guernsey, the Isle of Wight, the Isle of Man, or the Isles of Scilly. Full delivery information.
Returns
28-day returns policy. Contact us within 28 days of receipt if you are not happy with your order.
Items must be returned unused and in their original packaging. Our UK-based team will guide you through the process. Full returns information.
Green ridged concrete side table: answered.
Bold vertical ridges run the full height of the table, creating raised edges and recessed channels that cast shadow lines throughout the day. The depth is enough to be visible from across the room and tactile under the hand. The pattern gives the table a sculptural quality that flat concrete cannot.
The green sits in a muted, earthy register rather than a bright one. Closer to olive or sage than emerald. The ridges create tonal variation within the colour: lighter on the raised edges, darker in the recesses, which gives the surface depth a flat green could not achieve.
The colour is integral to the GFRC rather than a painted coating. It will not chip, peel or flake. The sealed finish protects the surface while allowing the green tone to show through with its natural depth.
Beside a deep-olive or charcoal sofa where the green connects through tone. Against white walls where the ridged column becomes the accent piece. In a hallway with a dark console. In a bedroom with warm-neutral linen where it adds an architectural element. For a lamp that contrasts with the ridged concrete, the Artichoke Table Lamp Base creates a considered pairing.
GFRC is concrete reinforced with glass fibres that add tensile strength. It is lighter and more durable than poured concrete, resistant to cracking, and suitable for detailed surface textures like the ridge pattern on this table. The glass fibres are not visible on the finished surface.
22.5 kg. Two people recommended for carrying and positioning safely. Once placed, the weight keeps it firmly anchored. It will not shift, wobble or slide under normal daily use.
No. It arrives as a single finished piece of GFRC. No tools, no hardware, no flat-pack steps. Position it with two people and the table is ready to use immediately.
The top is divided into a geometric grid echoing the vertical ridging on the sides. It adds visual interest from above and provides a textured surface that holds objects naturally.
Wipe with a damp cloth. Avoid abrasive cleaners and chemical sprays. The surface is sealed but not coated. Minor variations in tone and texture across the ridged pattern are inherent to GFRC and contribute to the material's character.
400mm wide, 400mm deep, 450mm tall. Weight 22.5 kg. Green glass fibre reinforced concrete. Bold vertical ridge pattern with sectioned geometric top. Single-piece construction. No assembly required.
Bold accents in considered rooms.
A ridged concrete side table in green is the kind of piece that sets the tone for everything around it. Getting the balance right between bold texture and calm surroundings is what makes a sculptural accent feel intentional rather than out of place in a considered room.
Overview
No legs. All texture. All concrete.
A ridged side table in green glass fibre reinforced concrete. 400mm square, 450mm tall, 22.5 kg. Bold vertical ridges run the full height, creating shadow lines that shift as daylight moves. A sectioned geometric top echoes the ridging beneath. The green GFRC finish carries the colour through the material rather than sitting on top as a coating. No assembly. No legs. One continuous sculptural column of reinforced concrete, ready to position the moment it arrives.
What the ridged column changes.
- It adds sculpture beside the sofa: The vertical ridges and legless form give this table a presence that flat-sided alternatives cannot match.
- It introduces a mineral the room lacked: Between linen, timber and upholstery, GFRC adds cool tactile weight that soft furnishings cannot provide.
- It brings colour through concrete: Green GFRC is unusual. The muted, earthy tone works as an accent without the brightness of paint or the neutrality of grey.
- It changes with the light: Ridges cast deeper shadows in direct sun and soften under lamplight, giving a single-material surface a tonal range it earns through form.
- It anchors without moving: At 22.5 kg the table sits where placed and does not shift when a glass is set down or a book rested against it.
- It arrives finished: No assembly, no tools. Position with two people and the table is ready.
Rooms that need one bold element.
Beside a deep-olive or charcoal sofa where the green connects through tone. Against white walls where the ridged column becomes the room's single accent. In a hallway beside a dark-timber console and a brass-framed mirror where it holds keys with sculptural weight. In a bedroom with warm-neutral linen where the concrete adds the one hard, architectural element the scheme needed. For ideas on introducing textural accents into warm-toned rooms, our kitchen organisation guide covers how considered statement pieces work alongside everyday furnishings.
Description
The surface is the whole structure.
Most side tables separate the surface from the structure. A top sits on legs. This table does not work that way. There are no legs. The entire form is a single column of glass fibre reinforced concrete, 400mm square and 450mm tall, with a bold vertical ridge pattern running the full height and a sectioned top that divides the surface into a geometric grid. The ridges are the structure. The texture is the design. The green finish carries the colour through the material rather than sitting on top of it.
At 22.5 kg the weight is substantial. It sits where you place it and does not shift when a drink is set down. The glass fibre reinforcement gives the concrete tensile strength without brittleness, which means the ridged surface handles daily contact, occasional knocks and the general business of a table that lives beside a sofa or a bed.
No assembly required. It arrives as a finished piece. The green tone is unusual for concrete furniture, which defaults to grey or white. This one commits to colour and makes it work through the depth of the GFRC material. For a lamp that introduces a contrasting organic texture beside the ridged concrete, the Natural Wriggle Touch Table Lamp creates a pairing that balances the mineral with the tactile.
What the concrete column delivers.
- Glass fibre reinforced concrete. GFRC is lighter and stronger than poured concrete. The green colour is integral to the material rather than a coating that can chip or peel.
- Bold vertical ridge pattern. Ridges run the full height, creating shadow lines that change depth as the light moves. They give the table a sculptural presence flat surfaces lack.
- Sectioned top surface. The top divides into a geometric grid echoing the vertical ridging. It adds visual interest from above and holds objects in place on the textured surface.
- 400 x 400 x 450mm. A compact square footprint that fits beside a sofa arm, a bed or in an alcove. The 450mm height matches most sofa-arm and mattress-top levels.
- 22.5 kg, no assembly. Arrives as a single finished piece. Two people recommended for positioning. No tools, no hardware.
- Green GFRC finish. A muted, earthy green that works alongside warm neutrals, dark timber, brass and deep-toned upholstery without competing.
Why ridges outperform smooth surfaces.
A smooth concrete side table is a block. It has presence and weight, but it gives the eye nothing to follow once the first impression lands. Ridges change that. They create vertical shadow lines that shift in depth as the room's light changes through the day. In direct sunlight the shadows are sharp and defined. Under lamplight they soften into gradations that give the surface a warmth it would not otherwise carry. The ridged form also makes the green finish work harder: the colour appears darker in the recesses and lighter on the raised edges, producing a tonal range from a single material that a flat surface could never achieve.
Where green concrete earns its place.
Beside a deep olive or charcoal sofa on a warm timber floor, the green GFRC connects to the palette through tone rather than matching directly. The ridged texture introduces a mineral quality that contrasts with upholstery and wood. Against white walls, the green column becomes the room's accent piece without needing anything else. In a hallway with a dark console and a brass-framed mirror, it provides a surface for keys and a candle with sculptural weight. In a bedroom beside a low bed with linen in warm neutrals, the ridged concrete adds the one hard, architectural element that stops the room feeling too soft.
Before it goes into position.
- Weight: 22.5 kg. Two people recommended for carrying and positioning. Measure doorways and turns between the front door and the final location. Once placed, the weight anchors the table firmly.
- Dimensions: 400 x 400 x 450mm. The 400mm square base fits beside most sofa arms and alongside standard UK single and double beds. Allow clearance on all sides for the ridged texture to be visible rather than pressed against a wall.
- Surface care. Wipe with a damp cloth. The GFRC surface is sealed but not coated. Avoid abrasive cleaners. Minor variations in tone and texture across the ridged surface are inherent to the material and part of its character.
Specifications
Delivery & Returns
Delivery
| Service | Timescale | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Standard | 3-5 working days | Free |
| Next working day | Order before 4pm | £5.95 |
UK mainland only. Orders placed on weekends or bank holidays are dispatched the next working day.
We are unable to deliver to Northern Ireland, the Scottish Isles, Jersey, Guernsey, the Isle of Wight, the Isle of Man, or the Isles of Scilly. Full delivery information.
Returns
28-day returns policy. Contact us within 28 days of receipt if you are not happy with your order.
Items must be returned unused and in their original packaging. Our UK-based team will guide you through the process. Full returns information.
FAQs
Green ridged concrete side table: answered.
Bold vertical ridges run the full height of the table, creating raised edges and recessed channels that cast shadow lines throughout the day. The depth is enough to be visible from across the room and tactile under the hand. The pattern gives the table a sculptural quality that flat concrete cannot.
The green sits in a muted, earthy register rather than a bright one. Closer to olive or sage than emerald. The ridges create tonal variation within the colour: lighter on the raised edges, darker in the recesses, which gives the surface depth a flat green could not achieve.
The colour is integral to the GFRC rather than a painted coating. It will not chip, peel or flake. The sealed finish protects the surface while allowing the green tone to show through with its natural depth.
Beside a deep-olive or charcoal sofa where the green connects through tone. Against white walls where the ridged column becomes the accent piece. In a hallway with a dark console. In a bedroom with warm-neutral linen where it adds an architectural element. For a lamp that contrasts with the ridged concrete, the Artichoke Table Lamp Base creates a considered pairing.
GFRC is concrete reinforced with glass fibres that add tensile strength. It is lighter and more durable than poured concrete, resistant to cracking, and suitable for detailed surface textures like the ridge pattern on this table. The glass fibres are not visible on the finished surface.
22.5 kg. Two people recommended for carrying and positioning safely. Once placed, the weight keeps it firmly anchored. It will not shift, wobble or slide under normal daily use.
No. It arrives as a single finished piece of GFRC. No tools, no hardware, no flat-pack steps. Position it with two people and the table is ready to use immediately.
The top is divided into a geometric grid echoing the vertical ridging on the sides. It adds visual interest from above and provides a textured surface that holds objects naturally.
Wipe with a damp cloth. Avoid abrasive cleaners and chemical sprays. The surface is sealed but not coated. Minor variations in tone and texture across the ridged pattern are inherent to GFRC and contribute to the material's character.
400mm wide, 400mm deep, 450mm tall. Weight 22.5 kg. Green glass fibre reinforced concrete. Bold vertical ridge pattern with sectioned geometric top. Single-piece construction. No assembly required.
Knowledge Hub
Bold accents in considered rooms.
A ridged concrete side table in green is the kind of piece that sets the tone for everything around it. Getting the balance right between bold texture and calm surroundings is what makes a sculptural accent feel intentional rather than out of place in a considered room.
Green Glass Fibre Reinforced Concrete Ridged Side Table
Overview
Description
Specifications
Delivery & Returns
FAQs
Knowledge Hub
No legs. All texture. All concrete.
A ridged side table in green glass fibre reinforced concrete. 400mm square, 450mm tall, 22.5 kg. Bold vertical ridges run the full height, creating shadow lines that shift as daylight moves. A sectioned geometric top echoes the ridging beneath. The green GFRC finish carries the colour through the material rather than sitting on top as a coating. No assembly. No legs. One continuous sculptural column of reinforced concrete, ready to position the moment it arrives.
What the ridged column changes.
- It adds sculpture beside the sofa: The vertical ridges and legless form give this table a presence that flat-sided alternatives cannot match.
- It introduces a mineral the room lacked: Between linen, timber and upholstery, GFRC adds cool tactile weight that soft furnishings cannot provide.
- It brings colour through concrete: Green GFRC is unusual. The muted, earthy tone works as an accent without the brightness of paint or the neutrality of grey.
- It changes with the light: Ridges cast deeper shadows in direct sun and soften under lamplight, giving a single-material surface a tonal range it earns through form.
- It anchors without moving: At 22.5 kg the table sits where placed and does not shift when a glass is set down or a book rested against it.
- It arrives finished: No assembly, no tools. Position with two people and the table is ready.
Rooms that need one bold element.
Beside a deep-olive or charcoal sofa where the green connects through tone. Against white walls where the ridged column becomes the room's single accent. In a hallway beside a dark-timber console and a brass-framed mirror where it holds keys with sculptural weight. In a bedroom with warm-neutral linen where the concrete adds the one hard, architectural element the scheme needed. For ideas on introducing textural accents into warm-toned rooms, our kitchen organisation guide covers how considered statement pieces work alongside everyday furnishings.
The surface is the whole structure.
Most side tables separate the surface from the structure. A top sits on legs. This table does not work that way. There are no legs. The entire form is a single column of glass fibre reinforced concrete, 400mm square and 450mm tall, with a bold vertical ridge pattern running the full height and a sectioned top that divides the surface into a geometric grid. The ridges are the structure. The texture is the design. The green finish carries the colour through the material rather than sitting on top of it.
At 22.5 kg the weight is substantial. It sits where you place it and does not shift when a drink is set down. The glass fibre reinforcement gives the concrete tensile strength without brittleness, which means the ridged surface handles daily contact, occasional knocks and the general business of a table that lives beside a sofa or a bed.
No assembly required. It arrives as a finished piece. The green tone is unusual for concrete furniture, which defaults to grey or white. This one commits to colour and makes it work through the depth of the GFRC material. For a lamp that introduces a contrasting organic texture beside the ridged concrete, the Natural Wriggle Touch Table Lamp creates a pairing that balances the mineral with the tactile.
What the concrete column delivers.
- Glass fibre reinforced concrete. GFRC is lighter and stronger than poured concrete. The green colour is integral to the material rather than a coating that can chip or peel.
- Bold vertical ridge pattern. Ridges run the full height, creating shadow lines that change depth as the light moves. They give the table a sculptural presence flat surfaces lack.
- Sectioned top surface. The top divides into a geometric grid echoing the vertical ridging. It adds visual interest from above and holds objects in place on the textured surface.
- 400 x 400 x 450mm. A compact square footprint that fits beside a sofa arm, a bed or in an alcove. The 450mm height matches most sofa-arm and mattress-top levels.
- 22.5 kg, no assembly. Arrives as a single finished piece. Two people recommended for positioning. No tools, no hardware.
- Green GFRC finish. A muted, earthy green that works alongside warm neutrals, dark timber, brass and deep-toned upholstery without competing.
Why ridges outperform smooth surfaces.
A smooth concrete side table is a block. It has presence and weight, but it gives the eye nothing to follow once the first impression lands. Ridges change that. They create vertical shadow lines that shift in depth as the room's light changes through the day. In direct sunlight the shadows are sharp and defined. Under lamplight they soften into gradations that give the surface a warmth it would not otherwise carry. The ridged form also makes the green finish work harder: the colour appears darker in the recesses and lighter on the raised edges, producing a tonal range from a single material that a flat surface could never achieve.
Where green concrete earns its place.
Beside a deep olive or charcoal sofa on a warm timber floor, the green GFRC connects to the palette through tone rather than matching directly. The ridged texture introduces a mineral quality that contrasts with upholstery and wood. Against white walls, the green column becomes the room's accent piece without needing anything else. In a hallway with a dark console and a brass-framed mirror, it provides a surface for keys and a candle with sculptural weight. In a bedroom beside a low bed with linen in warm neutrals, the ridged concrete adds the one hard, architectural element that stops the room feeling too soft.
Before it goes into position.
- Weight: 22.5 kg. Two people recommended for carrying and positioning. Measure doorways and turns between the front door and the final location. Once placed, the weight anchors the table firmly.
- Dimensions: 400 x 400 x 450mm. The 400mm square base fits beside most sofa arms and alongside standard UK single and double beds. Allow clearance on all sides for the ridged texture to be visible rather than pressed against a wall.
- Surface care. Wipe with a damp cloth. The GFRC surface is sealed but not coated. Avoid abrasive cleaners. Minor variations in tone and texture across the ridged surface are inherent to the material and part of its character.
Delivery
| Service | Timescale | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Standard | 3-5 working days | Free |
| Next working day | Order before 4pm | £5.95 |
UK mainland only. Orders placed on weekends or bank holidays are dispatched the next working day.
We are unable to deliver to Northern Ireland, the Scottish Isles, Jersey, Guernsey, the Isle of Wight, the Isle of Man, or the Isles of Scilly. Full delivery information.
Returns
28-day returns policy. Contact us within 28 days of receipt if you are not happy with your order.
Items must be returned unused and in their original packaging. Our UK-based team will guide you through the process. Full returns information.
Green ridged concrete side table: answered.
Bold vertical ridges run the full height of the table, creating raised edges and recessed channels that cast shadow lines throughout the day. The depth is enough to be visible from across the room and tactile under the hand. The pattern gives the table a sculptural quality that flat concrete cannot.
The green sits in a muted, earthy register rather than a bright one. Closer to olive or sage than emerald. The ridges create tonal variation within the colour: lighter on the raised edges, darker in the recesses, which gives the surface depth a flat green could not achieve.
The colour is integral to the GFRC rather than a painted coating. It will not chip, peel or flake. The sealed finish protects the surface while allowing the green tone to show through with its natural depth.
Beside a deep-olive or charcoal sofa where the green connects through tone. Against white walls where the ridged column becomes the accent piece. In a hallway with a dark console. In a bedroom with warm-neutral linen where it adds an architectural element. For a lamp that contrasts with the ridged concrete, the Artichoke Table Lamp Base creates a considered pairing.
GFRC is concrete reinforced with glass fibres that add tensile strength. It is lighter and more durable than poured concrete, resistant to cracking, and suitable for detailed surface textures like the ridge pattern on this table. The glass fibres are not visible on the finished surface.
22.5 kg. Two people recommended for carrying and positioning safely. Once placed, the weight keeps it firmly anchored. It will not shift, wobble or slide under normal daily use.
No. It arrives as a single finished piece of GFRC. No tools, no hardware, no flat-pack steps. Position it with two people and the table is ready to use immediately.
The top is divided into a geometric grid echoing the vertical ridging on the sides. It adds visual interest from above and provides a textured surface that holds objects naturally.
Wipe with a damp cloth. Avoid abrasive cleaners and chemical sprays. The surface is sealed but not coated. Minor variations in tone and texture across the ridged pattern are inherent to GFRC and contribute to the material's character.
400mm wide, 400mm deep, 450mm tall. Weight 22.5 kg. Green glass fibre reinforced concrete. Bold vertical ridge pattern with sectioned geometric top. Single-piece construction. No assembly required.
Bold accents in considered rooms.
A ridged concrete side table in green is the kind of piece that sets the tone for everything around it. Getting the balance right between bold texture and calm surroundings is what makes a sculptural accent feel intentional rather than out of place in a considered room.
Overview
No legs. All texture. All concrete.
A ridged side table in green glass fibre reinforced concrete. 400mm square, 450mm tall, 22.5 kg. Bold vertical ridges run the full height, creating shadow lines that shift as daylight moves. A sectioned geometric top echoes the ridging beneath. The green GFRC finish carries the colour through the material rather than sitting on top as a coating. No assembly. No legs. One continuous sculptural column of reinforced concrete, ready to position the moment it arrives.
What the ridged column changes.
- It adds sculpture beside the sofa: The vertical ridges and legless form give this table a presence that flat-sided alternatives cannot match.
- It introduces a mineral the room lacked: Between linen, timber and upholstery, GFRC adds cool tactile weight that soft furnishings cannot provide.
- It brings colour through concrete: Green GFRC is unusual. The muted, earthy tone works as an accent without the brightness of paint or the neutrality of grey.
- It changes with the light: Ridges cast deeper shadows in direct sun and soften under lamplight, giving a single-material surface a tonal range it earns through form.
- It anchors without moving: At 22.5 kg the table sits where placed and does not shift when a glass is set down or a book rested against it.
- It arrives finished: No assembly, no tools. Position with two people and the table is ready.
Rooms that need one bold element.
Beside a deep-olive or charcoal sofa where the green connects through tone. Against white walls where the ridged column becomes the room's single accent. In a hallway beside a dark-timber console and a brass-framed mirror where it holds keys with sculptural weight. In a bedroom with warm-neutral linen where the concrete adds the one hard, architectural element the scheme needed. For ideas on introducing textural accents into warm-toned rooms, our kitchen organisation guide covers how considered statement pieces work alongside everyday furnishings.
Description
The surface is the whole structure.
Most side tables separate the surface from the structure. A top sits on legs. This table does not work that way. There are no legs. The entire form is a single column of glass fibre reinforced concrete, 400mm square and 450mm tall, with a bold vertical ridge pattern running the full height and a sectioned top that divides the surface into a geometric grid. The ridges are the structure. The texture is the design. The green finish carries the colour through the material rather than sitting on top of it.
At 22.5 kg the weight is substantial. It sits where you place it and does not shift when a drink is set down. The glass fibre reinforcement gives the concrete tensile strength without brittleness, which means the ridged surface handles daily contact, occasional knocks and the general business of a table that lives beside a sofa or a bed.
No assembly required. It arrives as a finished piece. The green tone is unusual for concrete furniture, which defaults to grey or white. This one commits to colour and makes it work through the depth of the GFRC material. For a lamp that introduces a contrasting organic texture beside the ridged concrete, the Natural Wriggle Touch Table Lamp creates a pairing that balances the mineral with the tactile.
What the concrete column delivers.
- Glass fibre reinforced concrete. GFRC is lighter and stronger than poured concrete. The green colour is integral to the material rather than a coating that can chip or peel.
- Bold vertical ridge pattern. Ridges run the full height, creating shadow lines that change depth as the light moves. They give the table a sculptural presence flat surfaces lack.
- Sectioned top surface. The top divides into a geometric grid echoing the vertical ridging. It adds visual interest from above and holds objects in place on the textured surface.
- 400 x 400 x 450mm. A compact square footprint that fits beside a sofa arm, a bed or in an alcove. The 450mm height matches most sofa-arm and mattress-top levels.
- 22.5 kg, no assembly. Arrives as a single finished piece. Two people recommended for positioning. No tools, no hardware.
- Green GFRC finish. A muted, earthy green that works alongside warm neutrals, dark timber, brass and deep-toned upholstery without competing.
Why ridges outperform smooth surfaces.
A smooth concrete side table is a block. It has presence and weight, but it gives the eye nothing to follow once the first impression lands. Ridges change that. They create vertical shadow lines that shift in depth as the room's light changes through the day. In direct sunlight the shadows are sharp and defined. Under lamplight they soften into gradations that give the surface a warmth it would not otherwise carry. The ridged form also makes the green finish work harder: the colour appears darker in the recesses and lighter on the raised edges, producing a tonal range from a single material that a flat surface could never achieve.
Where green concrete earns its place.
Beside a deep olive or charcoal sofa on a warm timber floor, the green GFRC connects to the palette through tone rather than matching directly. The ridged texture introduces a mineral quality that contrasts with upholstery and wood. Against white walls, the green column becomes the room's accent piece without needing anything else. In a hallway with a dark console and a brass-framed mirror, it provides a surface for keys and a candle with sculptural weight. In a bedroom beside a low bed with linen in warm neutrals, the ridged concrete adds the one hard, architectural element that stops the room feeling too soft.
Before it goes into position.
- Weight: 22.5 kg. Two people recommended for carrying and positioning. Measure doorways and turns between the front door and the final location. Once placed, the weight anchors the table firmly.
- Dimensions: 400 x 400 x 450mm. The 400mm square base fits beside most sofa arms and alongside standard UK single and double beds. Allow clearance on all sides for the ridged texture to be visible rather than pressed against a wall.
- Surface care. Wipe with a damp cloth. The GFRC surface is sealed but not coated. Avoid abrasive cleaners. Minor variations in tone and texture across the ridged surface are inherent to the material and part of its character.
Specifications
Delivery & Returns
Delivery
| Service | Timescale | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Standard | 3-5 working days | Free |
| Next working day | Order before 4pm | £5.95 |
UK mainland only. Orders placed on weekends or bank holidays are dispatched the next working day.
We are unable to deliver to Northern Ireland, the Scottish Isles, Jersey, Guernsey, the Isle of Wight, the Isle of Man, or the Isles of Scilly. Full delivery information.
Returns
28-day returns policy. Contact us within 28 days of receipt if you are not happy with your order.
Items must be returned unused and in their original packaging. Our UK-based team will guide you through the process. Full returns information.
FAQs
Green ridged concrete side table: answered.
Bold vertical ridges run the full height of the table, creating raised edges and recessed channels that cast shadow lines throughout the day. The depth is enough to be visible from across the room and tactile under the hand. The pattern gives the table a sculptural quality that flat concrete cannot.
The green sits in a muted, earthy register rather than a bright one. Closer to olive or sage than emerald. The ridges create tonal variation within the colour: lighter on the raised edges, darker in the recesses, which gives the surface depth a flat green could not achieve.
The colour is integral to the GFRC rather than a painted coating. It will not chip, peel or flake. The sealed finish protects the surface while allowing the green tone to show through with its natural depth.
Beside a deep-olive or charcoal sofa where the green connects through tone. Against white walls where the ridged column becomes the accent piece. In a hallway with a dark console. In a bedroom with warm-neutral linen where it adds an architectural element. For a lamp that contrasts with the ridged concrete, the Artichoke Table Lamp Base creates a considered pairing.
GFRC is concrete reinforced with glass fibres that add tensile strength. It is lighter and more durable than poured concrete, resistant to cracking, and suitable for detailed surface textures like the ridge pattern on this table. The glass fibres are not visible on the finished surface.
22.5 kg. Two people recommended for carrying and positioning safely. Once placed, the weight keeps it firmly anchored. It will not shift, wobble or slide under normal daily use.
No. It arrives as a single finished piece of GFRC. No tools, no hardware, no flat-pack steps. Position it with two people and the table is ready to use immediately.
The top is divided into a geometric grid echoing the vertical ridging on the sides. It adds visual interest from above and provides a textured surface that holds objects naturally.
Wipe with a damp cloth. Avoid abrasive cleaners and chemical sprays. The surface is sealed but not coated. Minor variations in tone and texture across the ridged pattern are inherent to GFRC and contribute to the material's character.
400mm wide, 400mm deep, 450mm tall. Weight 22.5 kg. Green glass fibre reinforced concrete. Bold vertical ridge pattern with sectioned geometric top. Single-piece construction. No assembly required.
Knowledge Hub
Bold accents in considered rooms.
A ridged concrete side table in green is the kind of piece that sets the tone for everything around it. Getting the balance right between bold texture and calm surroundings is what makes a sculptural accent feel intentional rather than out of place in a considered room.