Founded in 1948 by Alberto Minotti in Meda, the Brianza town that sits at the gravitational centre of Italian furniture production, Minotti has become one of the most recognisable names in contemporary upholstered design. Today the company is led by Alberto's sons Renato and Roberto Minotti, with the third generation — Alessio and Susanna — now steering the creative and commercial direction. This unbroken family continuity, combined with sixty thousand square metres of vertically integrated manufacturing in Meda, gives the brand a consistency of craft that few houses in its segment can match.
Minotti's artistic direction has been led since 1997 by Rodolfo Dordoni, whose quiet, architectural sensibility shaped the language the world now associates with the brand: deeply tailored sofas, precise metal bases, low profiles, and a palette of warm neutrals. Since 2018, the Minotti Studio — a curated group that includes Marcio Kogan/Studio MK27, GamFratesi, Nendo, Inoda+Sveje, Christophe Delcourt and Lissoni&Partners — works under Dordoni's coordination to release an annual collection presented each spring at the Milan showroom, an event that has become a pilgrimage for designers worldwide.
The product range is organised around seating — the Minotti signature — with landmark families such as Andes, Quadrado, Lars, Goodman, Horizonte, Roger, Jacques, and Freeman. Each is offered in modular configurations that allow interior architects to compose long, sculptural seating landscapes in large residences, hotels, and private lounges. Tables, case goods, outdoor collections, beds, rugs, and a complete lighting line extend the aesthetic into every room of the home, while the Minotti Kitchen by Ricardo Bofill — launched in 2024 — brings the same restrained grammar to the culinary space.
Minotti is distributed through a worldwide network of more than eighty Minotti Flagship Stores and four hundred multi-brand partners in seventy countries, often occupying landmark architecture such as the Minotti Flagship in London designed by Jamie Fobert and the Minotti New York on Madison Avenue. Each flagship is designed internally to the brand's codes, creating a globally coherent retail experience.
For architects and private clients seeking quiet Italian luxury — upholstery as architecture, proportion as the primary material, and a lineage of craft that can still trace individual hand-stitching to the Meda factory floor — Minotti remains a definitive reference, instantly recognisable and increasingly considered a modern classic.