60m2 Apartment in São Paulo with References to Scandinavian Architecture
The first request made by the resident of this apartment, was to have a minimalist environment, with references to Scandinavian architecture.
The first request made by the resident of this apartment, was to have a minimalist environment, with references to Scandinavian architecture.
This Guaruja flat is the new address of a retired couple on the coast of São Paulo. The architectural intervention in the existing space was based on the decompartmentalization of the environments that were once fragmented did not represents the lifestyle of the residents.
This retro-style apartment was recently completed by BäN Architecture. The apartment has an area of 67 m2 and is located not far from Canal de l’Ourcq, Paris. In this apartment, the long corridor meters have been removed to make way for an extra room in a retro-urban style.
The project consists of a renovation of an attic left unfinished. We tried to keep the existing partitions and to modify them in order to avoid major demolitions.
The challenge posed by the design of this 2500 SF West Village apartment was to accommodate a second level for bedrooms while maintaining the architectural integrity of the industrial loft characterized by exposed concrete beams and tall south-west corner windows that offer natural light and panoramic views of the Hudson River.
Berg Design redesigned this Greenwich Village apartment to expose as much of the apartment to natural light. The new plan revolves around a vast living area and kitchen relocated adjacent to oversized windows. Industrial sized steel and glass doors were used to bring natural light into interior spaces.
A 350m² apartment located within a project facing Tel Aviv’s beautiful seafront. The Crystal Blue apartment takes up half of one of the buildings floors and was planned for a couple in their 50’s.
The Bandra apartment is designed with an adaptable and open arrangement. Re-moving dispensable walls between rooms and replacing them with objects optimizes space. By opening and closing, sliding and folding it up, the home is restructured, expanded, fragmented, connected or isolated.