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ร la Blanc Apartment / RIS Collective
ร la Blanc Apartment stands out through soft white shades that cultivate a sense of calm and refinement. Tall ceilings create inviting voids where natural light and reflections abound. Meanwhile, mirrors amplify the feeling of depth, offering an illusion of boundless expansion.
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Offset Family-House, London / R2 Studio Architects
Originally, the home was a 1960s detached house in Crystal Palace, situated at the end of a leafy cul-de-sac. It stood among mature trees and close neighbors. Although the family needed more space as they grew, the existing house was narrow, had low ceilings, and felt cramped. It also lacked a true connection to the outdoors.
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Cinema City Tower, Tbilisi / STIPFOLD
Cinema City Tower by STIPFOLD rises from a small 700 mยฒ site in Tbilisi. It follows strict building rules yet still offers a bold new form. Situated near a historic cinema, it respects the old structureโs heritage. At the same time, it reaches upward, aiming to reshape the cityโs skyline.
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Country House Interior / Designer Oksana Sheyh
A family estate to be inherited by the children – this is how one can characterize this dream house surrounded by centuries-old pine trees. Nothing here breaks the harmony with the surrounding space, so the main idea of the project was integrity and barrier-free: an open terrace, panoramic floor-to-ceiling windows, natural colors and textures create a feeling of complete unity with nature.
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Globant Office Peru / Contract Workplaces
Globant, the Argentine unicorn specializing in software engineering services, has continuously expanded its horizons to enter new markets and strengthen its presence worldwide. In 2014, the company established itself in Peru with multiple office locations in Lima. It occupies five floors of the Altavista Business Center, a tower building with panoramic views located in the financial district of San Isidro.
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Red Rock House, Las Vegas / Faulkner Architects
Red Rock House is a sculpture in dialogue with its surroundingsโa tacit acknowledgment that the desert grants no free passes. Here, architecture and environment fuse into a kind of equilibrium: the mass of concrete and steel, the careful harnessing of wind and sun, the silent acknowledgment of a harsh yet magnificent landscape.
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The House of the Elements / Neil Dusheiko Architects
From the street, House of the Elements seems like a typical late-19th-century London terrace. Yet behind its traditional Victorian facade lies a transformed interior that feels more like a calming sanctuary than a city home. Designed by Neil Dusheiko Architects for a young professional couple, this project embraces a spa-like atmosphere, open space, and close connections to nature.
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Full Residence, Bangkok / WARchitect
From a distance, Full House by WARchitect appears to be a single, serene white structure. Yet behind its sculpted gable faรงade lie two distinct residences bound by family ties rather than physical barriers. Inside these walls, an extended clanโgrandparents, siblings, spouses, and childrenโcoexists under one gracefully unified roof.