Home Projects Design Products Public Spaces Meet Play in Exercice’s Ping Pong Tables
Products

Public Spaces Meet Play in Exercice’s Ping Pong Tables

Share
Public Spaces Meet Play in Exercice's Ping Pong Tables
Geometric ping pong tables in Ingré, France © Exercice
Share

In Ingré, France, public spaces are reinterpreted by the French design agency Exercice through a series of sculptural ping pong tables that blur the line between play and urban interaction. Commissioned by Région Centre-Val de Loire, the project introduces four geometric, multipurpose tables that disrupt conventional gameplay while inviting gathering, experimentation, and evolving social use.

Geometric Forms Reinterpret the Traditional Ping Pong Table

Each sculptural table appears in a distinct shape and surface geometry, offering a different way to engage with the game. The teal green version adopts a triangular plan with a folded playing surface. One half remains flat and horizontal, while the other rises diagonally from the center net, creating an uneven field of play. To support this unusual form, the table stands on six legs that help distribute the weight across its angled planes when installed in public spaces.

The white table introduces another playful disruption in this public space. Designed with an oval plan, it features a circular cut-out near one end of the playing surface. Instead of bouncing back, the ball can drop through the opening, interrupting the expected rhythm of the game and inviting new ways of playing.

The remaining two tables continue this spirit of experimentation. A pink hexagonal table by Exercice adds a third side and an additional net position, allowing the game to shift from two players to three. Meanwhile, the pale blue oval table removes corners altogether, changing how the ball moves when it approaches the edge.

Instead of enforcing fixed rules, the project encourages players to invent their own games in the public park. According to the agency, the tables are designed to evolve through use, allowing the game to adapt to the people gathered around them in public spaces. This open-ended approach makes the public installation as much about interaction and conversation as competition.

Public Sculpture and Play Merge in Ingré, France

Beyond their playful geometries, the four tables share a consistent material language. Each one is supported by stainless steel legs that taper outward at the base and are anchored into circular floor plates. A perforated metal net runs across the center of each table, reinforcing the industrial yet sculptural quality of the installation in gardens and public spaces.

More than sports furniture, the project positions the ping pong table as a social object within park architecture and the urban landscape. Whether used for gameplay, informal gathering, or casual conversation, Exercice’s intervention turns a familiar recreational element into a dynamic piece of public design.

Share

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter.