Casa MZ reimagines a mid-century house in Iseo, Italy, through the precise eye of architect Andrea Pagani. The project joins a first-floor 1960s apartment with its former attic, creating a luminous double-height living volume and a tailored studio for the art historian owner. Original structure and contemporary interventions sit in close dialogue, giving this domestic interior a fresh rhythm while holding tight to the building’s layered history.
Minimalist Wooden Villa brings a precise, timber-lined calm to a contemporary chalet in Como, Italy, by Dario Turani Associati. The single-level house with a mezzanine relax loft leans on reclaimed wood, pale textiles, and filtered daylight to soften its rational, farmhouse-inspired shell. Inside, eco-conscious materials and restrained furnishings shape rooms that stay warm, efficient, and quietly connected to the surrounding garden.
Apartment on Via Falcone brings a bright, contemporary apartment to Marcianise, Italy, where ESFA architetti crafts a continuous day area around light and tailored joinery. Kitchen and living remain visually connected yet can close off when needed, maintaining fluid movement for everyday life. Throughout the home, stone-effect porcelain and measured color accents build a warm, refined rhythm that grounds the interior in a calm, urban character.
Cabedelo Apartment is a reimagined apartment in Viana do Castelo, Portugal, by Ricardo Azevedo Arquitecto. The project turns an anonymous seaside dwelling into a coherent arrangement of interior rooms and large exterior terraces, calibrated to daily rituals and social life. Across indoor volumes and generous outdoor platforms, it reframes a familiar housing model into a home oriented toward shared meals, leisure, and the long coastal horizon.
House reborn: renews a private family house in Israel by Spiegel Architects, led by architect Ron Spiegel, through a careful renovation rather than demolition. The project reshapes an existing split-level home for a couple and their two children, prioritizing light, greenery, and a richer daily routine. Across interior rooms and garden settings, the intervention balances inherited structure with a newly cohesive material palette that threads through every level.
Casa AH unfolds as a weekend house in a gated community outside Buenos Aires, Argentina, designed by Estudio GMARQ for a family seeking distance from the city. The house organizes social and private rooms around the golf course views, using concrete, glass, and warm wood to stitch together generous interiors with a measured connection to the landscape. Simple materials carry the atmosphere. Carefully tuned details shape the daily rhythm of arrival, rest, and return.
A home that honors the past while moving into the future reimagines a once-dark split-level house in Israel for a young family by Halel Architecture and Interior Design. The renovation shifts circulation, light, and daily life, turning the former warren of rooms into a fluid sequence of shared and private zones. Designed in 2025, this house now treats the original structure as an asset rather than a constraint.
Where the Jerusalem Hills Meet Contemporary Living sits in a moshav overlooking Jerusalem, Israel, shaped by interior designer Liad Yosef for a couple and their three children. The multi-level house translates years of shared life in a modest unit into a grounded, generous home, using local stone and tailored joinery to hold daily rituals and moments of quiet reflection within a clear, contemporary frame.