Objects do not exist independently of architecture. Surfaces must respond to volume, proportion, and circulation.
Our studio works with particular attention to large-scale environments — double-height walls, extended corridors, layered material palettes, and light-sensitive zones. In such contexts, scale cannot be approximate. It must be calibrated.
Textile and veneer interventions are developed with respect to architectural lines and structural considerations. Surface articulation aligns with spatial rhythm rather than competing with it.
We assess:
• Wall dimensions and viewing distance
• Light direction and shadow behaviour
• Adjacency to stone, glass, or timber
• Structural backing and support systems
Installation planning is considered from the outset, ensuring that surfaces integrate seamlessly into site conditions.
This architectural approach prevents surface work from feeling applied. Instead, it feels inevitable — as though conceived alongside the space itself.
Our goal is not to dominate architecture. It is to converse with it.
Studio Notes:
The stages of our site-responsive practice are explained here.
Considerations around scheduling and site readiness are outlined within our project timeline notes.
Surface interventions succeed when they respond to space rather than interrupt it.

