The Ghent residence rejects sterile accessibility in favor of warmth, dignity, and a deeply humane spatial experience designed to evolve alongside its inhabitants.
Built by Edifice Upstate, the minimal wood-clad home in the Catskill mountains is powered by the sun and connected to nature.
The site's buildable area was cut in half — so KWK Promes adapted its two-story residential scheme to fantastic effect.
Ravi Raj renovates a historic early 20th-century stone house in Mount Airy, Croton-on-Hudson, restoring and extending its material logic through a contemporary interior.
With a double-height volume and carefully framed openings, Aranda\Lasch transforms a compact New York apartment into viewport for light and landscape.
For his own family home in Melbourne, architect Paul Conrad begins with interior architecture—crafting a sequence of spaces where light, material, and proportion quietly shape everyday life.
Swee Design transforms a grand Federation home into a vibrant living gallery, proving that historic architecture can embrace contemporary color, collaboration, and personality.
Designed by Marcela Cure, this Pinecrest residence trades flash for finesse, using natural materials and muted tones to create a serene, family-centered retreat.
Through raw yet refined materials and a radically open plan, Marie Claire Mrad crafts an interior architecture that responds to light, climate, and the rhythms of daily life.
Openspace Architecture threads a home through Vancouver Island forest, dissolving boundaries between interior spaces and Saanich Inlet views.
Swatt + Partners reimagines a hillside home into a cohesive, light-filled residence that opens to views of San Francisco Bay, the Golden Gate Bridge, and beyond.
AAHA Studio reimagines the Pine Ave Residence in El Segundo as a calm, light-filled home where architecture reframes loss into renewal.
Ivy Ross’s Sea Ranch, California home, Standing Wave, designed by Suchi Reddy, is a neuroaesthetic retreat shaped by ocean views, light, and sound.
Cubo Design Architect designs a coastal residence in eastern Japan organized around a 65-foot swimming pool with Sukiya-zukuri influences.
On a 13 × 60-foot lot near Ibirapuera Park, Casa MA, by RUA 141, transforms industrial materials, gardens, and daylight into a warm, multi-level urban home.