Italy / Tag

Tintorum: A 15th-Century Poorhouse Recast for Quiet Urban Living Today

Tintorum: A 15th-Century Poorhouse Recast for Quiet Urban Living Today

Tintorum stands in Klausen, Italy, where Stefan Gamper Architecture reworks a 15th-century poorhouse into four pared-back apartments. The project keeps the building’s gravitas while drawing in daylight and calm, reading as both restoration and reinvention. Inside, old stone and timber hold company with glass, steel, and larch, creating a measured conversation between eras.

Aschmüllerhof by Stefan Gamper Architecture

Aschmüllerhof by Stefan Gamper Architecture

Aschmüllerhof sits in Laives, Italy, a house by Stefan Gamper Architecture that quietly threads contemporary life into the Bozen lowlands. The estate pairs a two-story residence with a working utility building, set within orchards and stitched by a pergola that frames a generous courtyard. Open rooms reach toward terraces and a private garden with a pool, while the build leans on masonry below and timber above to meet KlimaHaus A performance.

Altes Gericht: Maple Calm and Light in a Historic Klausen Apartment

Altes Gericht: Maple Calm and Light in a Historic Klausen Apartment

Altes Gericht lands inside Klausen, Italy’s listed Old Courthouse, where Stefan Gamper Architecture converts the upper levels into two compact apartments. The real estate type is apartment, but the project reads as a precise interior refit with a gentle hand. Under steep roofs and between old beams, the studio shapes calm rooms and puts every centimeter to work without noise or fuss.

Kessler’s Mountain Lodge — Courtyard Living With Alpine Warmth Inside

Kessler’s Mountain Lodge — Courtyard Living With Alpine Warmth Inside

Kessler’s Mountain Lodge anchors a reimagined farmstead in Natz-Schabs, Italy, where hospitality meets working agriculture. Stefan Gamper Architecture shapes a multi-building retreat around a protected courtyard, balancing guest comfort with regional materials and rhythm. Set within the alpine landscape, the lodge reads as both a guesthouse and a living farm, with chalets and apartments threaded into day-to-day production.

JC House on the Adriatic Balances Open Living and Quiet Rest Zones

JC House on the Adriatic Balances Open Living and Quiet Rest Zones

JC House sits high above Riccione, Italy, with the Adriatic stretching beyond expansive glazing. Architect Giada Spano reimagines this apartment as a fluid penthouse where materials set the tone and light orders the rooms. The renovation redirects daily life toward the terrace and sea while dialing up tactility inside with steel, terracotta, and layered glass.

Casa la Marchesana — A Monochrome Loft Threaded Through Old Walls

Casa la Marchesana — A Monochrome Loft Threaded Through Old Walls

Casa la Marchesana sits in Bologna, Italy, where a historic envelope meets a crisp, contemporary interior. Designed by Obicua, the apartment turns a compact plan into a tall, moody sequence with one decisive move. A matte black volume inserts circulation, kitchen, and mezzanine into the whitewashed shell, setting a confident rhythm across timber floors and exposed beams.

Vista Ostuni Reimagines a Tobacco Factory Into a Coastal Hotel Retreat

Vista Ostuni Reimagines a Tobacco Factory Into a Coastal Hotel Retreat

Vista Ostuni is a hotel in Ostuni, Italy, designed by RMA | Roberto Murgia Architetto. Set in the former Manifattura Tabacchi, the project turns a layered civic and monastic past into contemporary hospitality. The conversion restores the building’s generous volumes and stone fabric while aligning with five-star standards and local craft. It reads as both an urban re-opening and a coastal retreat, binding the White City to the plain of olive trees and the sea beyond.

Villa Rosita Marries Past And Present Across Light-Filled Rooms

Villa Rosita Marries Past And Present Across Light-Filled Rooms

Villa Rosita sits in Livorno, Italy, a house reimagined by MODO architettura + design. The project merges three former residences into one private villa, renewing both interiors and grounds. Clean lines, a neutral palette, and a lush garden set the tone, while classical pieces anchor the contemporary overhaul. It’s a coastal home with poise and a clear point of view.

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