Paula’s House / Luciano Kruk
A project where the connection with nature, the appreciation of design, and the willingness to work as a team converge.
A project where the connection with nature, the appreciation of design, and the willingness to work as a team converge.
These rattan pieces don’t read “beach house” but still seriously elevate your space!
A beauty salon focused on hair extensions, located in the residential complex Unit Home. The project began with an empty shell space. The main task was to create a logical layout with a clear separation between open and private zones – a challenge due to the large number of columns in the center of the room.
Faced with 2½ acres of lawn and little else, the owners of this property in the English Midlands were stumped: How could they create an enjoyable backyard that would also attract and support local wildlife?Landscape designer Victoria Philpott came to …
At the foot of the Montgó mountain in Javea, this dwelling unfolds, approaching its implementation with respect for the location and formal precision. The project avoids iconic gestures and prioritizes a clear integration into the environment through horizontal volumes, controlled proportions, and a land occupation that preserves the landscape’s readability.
in vilnius, KWK promes’ ‘trim house’ explores how reduced footprint and light shape a compact residential design.
The post KWK promes encloses interior garden within triangular ‘trim house’ in vilnius appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.
The Albuquerque Foundation is a cultural institution located in Sintra, Portugal, dedicated to the presentation and study of Chinese export porcelain and contemporary ceramics.
Set in Shanghai’s M50 Creative Park—a repurposed former woolen mill—BROWNIE/Project gallery merges art and commerce, extending beyond conventional photography exhibition to explore interactions between space, people, and life. Housed in a converted factory, the space retains distinctive industrial features: concrete columns, steel frames, and vintage wooden structures salvaged from an old Suzhou River bridge. The client insisted on preserving these historic elements while introducing new functions, aligning with the design team’s vision.
The light of Jeju is remarkably unique—piercing, mutable, and ever-shifting between winds, clouds, rain, and mist. The Light Museum is an attempt to capture this ephemeral nature of Jeju’s light through architecture. It is not a reproduction of nature’s forms, but an experimental structure that allows the sensations of nature to permeate through space.
Project Background – As China’s urban development gradually shifts from incremental construction to stock renewal, a new urban agenda has emerged: the reactivation of spatial value within existing community structures, transforming building stock into community assets of public significance. The project is located within a residential community completed in 2021. Through the transformation of three distinct spaces—the conversion of an ancillary building into a community art center, the renovation of an adjacent area into a community café, and the adaptation of a residential unit as an artist studio—a spatial network is established, linking public exhibition, social interaction, and individual creative practice.
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