AT PEACE: Alvar Sakari on Designing for What a Space Actually Is

There is a discipline in architecture that is often invoked but rarely sustained: the decision to stop adding and begin removing. Ludwig Mies van der Rohe described it as almost nothing. Dieter Rams framed it as as little design as possible. Both point to the same premise — that reduction is not absence, but precision. What remains must be enough.

Alvar Sakari works from that position. Trained in Copenhagen and now based in Helsinki, his practice is defined less by addition than by subtraction — of material, of ornament, of unnecessary resolution. Returning to Finland, he brought with him a sensibility that sits slightly outside the prevailing pace of the local context.

His collaboration, AT Peace with TERMINO emerged from a personal project: a steel pavilion conceptualized in 2018. Visualized by Lukasz Staniewski, Alvar built out the space in which the TERMINO kitchen does not appear as an object, but as a continuation of the same logic — modular, industrial, and materially consistent with the architecture itself.

Alma Leandra spoke to him about restraint, designing for a culture that values individuality yet reproduces sameness, and about the challenge of making something genuinely good from as little as possible.

What prompted your decision to return to Finland and establish your own studio?

Copenhagen felt like the right place to study, but returning home was important, to reconnect, and to understand the market I actually wanted to work in. The timing wasn't ideal, the industry there moves slowly. But starting my own studio had always been the goal, and doing it from home felt more grounded than trying to do it abroad.

Does designing in your home country give you more creative autonomy?

What I notice is that Finnish interest in German and Danish design is genuinely growing — but it arrives two to four years late. The appetite is there, it just lags. I'm not sure Finnish audiences are ready for a brutalist sensibility yet. They respect steel and industrial language, but there's a difference between respect and readiness. Committing to that aesthetic in your own home requires a confidence that is still developing there. Many want to be international, and are drawn to what's coming out of Berlin — but translating that into actual purchasing decisions is a different thing entirely. That gap is where I want to push my work.

Would you say there's a lack of individualism in Finland?

Most want to feel different, but then end up doing the same thing without realising it. It used to be a very particular sameness — clean, simple, deliberately understated. Now there's a collective push toward something grittier and more expressive. Which would be interesting, except it's already a few years old everywhere else. Everything arrives late, so by the time something feels like a statement here, it has already moved on somewhere else.

Does this push you in your design process to also go more against that? How does it affect your work, living in such a culture? 

I just do what I personally find interesting — and I think more people are genuinely curious about design now, partly because we're at an age where we're starting to make real decisions about our own homes.

That said, I still feel like most people gravitate toward the same familiar names, the big Scandinavian brands, the ones that feel safe and accessible. Which they are. But that accessibility comes from scale and mass production is what makes them affordable. Most end up with the same bedsheets, the same lights, the same vases, and somehow still feel like they have a personal point of view on design. It's a bit like fashion in that way, the desire to feel individual expressed through the exact same things everyone else is buying.

TERMINO is something different. It reads like a company that is genuinely trying to do something outside that logic. Which I respect. It's a niche proposition. 

Your work emphasizes material and ornamental reduction, what draws you to this restraint, and how do you decide what is essential in the space?

Ornamentation doesn't have to mean decoration in the traditional sense. It can be as quiet as a specific screw or the foot of a module. My instinct is always to remove what isn't necessary. You could call it minimalism, though ornamentation itself is such a broad concept that the label almost doesn't matter.

What interests me is the challenge of designing something for exactly what it is. When you strip away unnecessary detail, you stop masking the space and start revealing it. Light becomes a material, an ornament. A limited palette of materials creates a kind of calm — fewer competing textures means less visual noise, and the space can finally speak for itself.

I think a lot of projects that are considered successful are really just heavily decorated. Fill a room with designer pieces and people will call it beautiful, but they're responding to the objects, not the space. The room itself might be quite ordinary. The same logic applies to furniture. A chair can be lifted entirely by a fabric you happen to like, and suddenly the chair feels considered when really it's just the textile doing the work.

It's deeply subjective, which makes it hard to argue. But my position is fairly simple: if you can make something genuinely good using as little as possible, then you've actually made something. You see it, you understand it, you don't have to be told what it is. And I think that understanding comes down to assembly — how the parts come together, and whether each one earns its place.

You often describe that a feeling leads a project. Can you elaborate on how this intuition guided you through the TERMINO collaboration?

When I connect with a brief, the project becomes a feeling. My process is guided by a sense of what the project should be. 

With TERMINO it started from the pavilion concept, which was all steel. That already carries something precise and material. But working through it I realised it felt too cold, too enclosed — so the space grew, and I divided it into three zones: kitchen, living room, bedroom. From there the decisions followed instinctively. The exterior walls I had planned began to feel wrong. A glass box felt more honest — a 360-degree relationship with the surrounding landscape, nature becoming part of the interior.

From there it became a conversation between materials and sensation. The acoustic ceiling came from thinking about morning — wanting that first experience of the day to be soft and unhurried. The stone floor was the counterweight to all that steel and glass — not warm in temperature, but connected to something organic. Forest. Earth. Heated underfoot, it becomes something you want to move through barefoot.

I don't have a linear method. I make a decision, something feels wrong, I change it, part of it feels right and I keep that. The project moves forward that way — always led by whether something feels resolved or not.

Iteration is central to your process. How do you know when a design has reached clarity and coherence?

Sometimes, I have to just decide that, okay, now it's now it's ready. Especially if were pushing deadlines. 

The process involves a lot of iterations. I might take one brief, one feeling, and produce ten completely different versions from it — quite radical variations, all working from the same starting point. The final result is usually somewhere in the combination of those. A detail from one version, a solution from another, and then it gradually becomes one thing. You just spend a lot of hours with it. Sometimes I step away for a day deliberately, create some distance, and then come back and find the project again.

With the TERMINO collaboration — the pavilion I mentioned was actually a personal project from 2018, nothing to do with TERMINO at the time. It was just a steel box I had been trying to make liveable. Lucas was the one who visualised it, he made all the renderings. So what you see in the TERMINO collaboration is essentially the final version of that pavilion design — though it looks almost nothing like where it started. The pavilion was just the concept, the idea of a steel building. That was the starting point.

This project emphasizes modularity, and especially like you were already mentioning spatial fluidity. How did the TERMINO kitchen shape your choices for designing the space? 

A lot of it comes down to the exterior — the building stands on steel stilts, which immediately references the TERMINO modules. The sleekness, the materiality, the logic of assembly. The modules are quite easy to read — you understand how they go together, they're industrial without being complicated. I wanted the building to have that same quality. Stilts, base, pillars, roof. A very simple structure. Nothing hidden, nothing decorative. The same steel, the same minimal language, nothing added that doesn't need to be there. Which is, again, just how I think about design.

TERMINOs design philosophy overlaps quite a lot with yours. 

Yes. I was personally interested in Termino's modular systems before this project, so that just felt like a good match. The modularity shaped this project's framework nicely. 

Are there other forms or materials you have been wanting to explore?

Collaborations. I am also interested in mixing materials, ceramics with textiles, wire, or stone.

How do you imagine your work evolving?

I hope I never stop experimenting. The moment we believe we have the answer is the moment we begin to stagnate. I hope the world remains kind enough to allow me to pursue this, and that I can continue to follow my intuition, regardless of circumstance.

How would you describe your own work?

A balance between control and surrender. A mix of processes and reflections.

What is currently haunting and driving your practice?

Intuition is the driving force. I am fascinated by theoretical frameworks in design. My "Creature" series, for example, is based on Carl Jung's archetypes. What I find most beautiful is that people always recognise something familiar in these hybrid beings — everyone projects something of their own.

How do you balance privacy without really utilizing walls in the classical sense?

The space is designed for two people — private, but with enough room for guests.

What makes it work spatially are the two cores. It acts as a dividing wall without closing the space off completely. You move freely around it, but the rooms are genuinely separated — you can't see from the bedroom into the kitchen, which in a space this size is not something you take for granted. It's open but not entirely open. Semi-open, maybe. If you want to close the bedroom off completely, sliding doors integrated into the core would do it.

The core also carries most of the functional load — toilet between the bedroom and living room, fridge, kitchen cabinets, wardrobe. When you come in via the central staircase the wardrobe is immediately to the left, built into the core wall. No separate furniture, no cabinets standing out from the wall. Everything contained, everything serving the structure.

The fireplace was a deliberate choice over the more obvious solutions — layering in textures, adding small lights, decorating toward warmth. Instead, one real fire. A natural element that does the same work more honestly.

CREDITS

Editor

Alma Leandra

Visualized by

Lukasz Staniewski

There is a discipline in architecture that is often invoked but rarely sustained: the decision to stop adding and begin removing. Ludwig Mies van der Rohe described it as almost nothing. Dieter Rams framed it as as little design as possible. Both point to the same premise — that reduction is not absence, but precision. What remains must be enough.

Alvar Sakari works from that position. Trained in Copenhagen and now based in Helsinki, his practice is defined less by addition than by subtraction — of material, of ornament, of unnecessary resolution. Returning to Finland, he brought with him a sensibility that sits slightly outside the prevailing pace of the local context.

His collaboration, AT Peace with TERMINO emerged from a personal project: a steel pavilion conceptualized in 2018. Visualized by Lukasz Staniewski, Alvar built out the space in which the TERMINO kitchen does not appear as an object, but as a continuation of the same logic — modular, industrial, and materially consistent with the architecture itself.

Alma Leandra spoke to him about restraint, designing for a culture that values individuality yet reproduces sameness, and about the challenge of making something genuinely good from as little as possible.

What prompted your decision to return to Finland and establish your own studio?

Copenhagen felt like the right place to study, but returning home was important, to reconnect, and to understand the market I actually wanted to work in. The timing wasn't ideal, the industry there moves slowly. But starting my own studio had always been the goal, and doing it from home felt more grounded than trying to do it abroad.

Does designing in your home country give you more creative autonomy?

What I notice is that Finnish interest in German and Danish design is genuinely growing — but it arrives two to four years late. The appetite is there, it just lags. I'm not sure Finnish audiences are ready for a brutalist sensibility yet. They respect steel and industrial language, but there's a difference between respect and readiness. Committing to that aesthetic in your own home requires a confidence that is still developing there. Many want to be international, and are drawn to what's coming out of Berlin — but translating that into actual purchasing decisions is a different thing entirely. That gap is where I want to push my work.

Would you say there's a lack of individualism in Finland?

Most want to feel different, but then end up doing the same thing without realising it. It used to be a very particular sameness — clean, simple, deliberately understated. Now there's a collective push toward something grittier and more expressive. Which would be interesting, except it's already a few years old everywhere else. Everything arrives late, so by the time something feels like a statement here, it has already moved on somewhere else.

Does this push you in your design process to also go more against that? How does it affect your work, living in such a culture? 

I just do what I personally find interesting — and I think more people are genuinely curious about design now, partly because we're at an age where we're starting to make real decisions about our own homes.

That said, I still feel like most people gravitate toward the same familiar names, the big Scandinavian brands, the ones that feel safe and accessible. Which they are. But that accessibility comes from scale and mass production is what makes them affordable. Most end up with the same bedsheets, the same lights, the same vases, and somehow still feel like they have a personal point of view on design. It's a bit like fashion in that way, the desire to feel individual expressed through the exact same things everyone else is buying.

TERMINO is something different. It reads like a company that is genuinely trying to do something outside that logic. Which I respect. It's a niche proposition. 

Your work emphasizes material and ornamental reduction, what draws you to this restraint, and how do you decide what is essential in the space?

Ornamentation doesn't have to mean decoration in the traditional sense. It can be as quiet as a specific screw or the foot of a module. My instinct is always to remove what isn't necessary. You could call it minimalism, though ornamentation itself is such a broad concept that the label almost doesn't matter.

What interests me is the challenge of designing something for exactly what it is. When you strip away unnecessary detail, you stop masking the space and start revealing it. Light becomes a material, an ornament. A limited palette of materials creates a kind of calm — fewer competing textures means less visual noise, and the space can finally speak for itself.

I think a lot of projects that are considered successful are really just heavily decorated. Fill a room with designer pieces and people will call it beautiful, but they're responding to the objects, not the space. The room itself might be quite ordinary. The same logic applies to furniture. A chair can be lifted entirely by a fabric you happen to like, and suddenly the chair feels considered when really it's just the textile doing the work.

It's deeply subjective, which makes it hard to argue. But my position is fairly simple: if you can make something genuinely good using as little as possible, then you've actually made something. You see it, you understand it, you don't have to be told what it is. And I think that understanding comes down to assembly — how the parts come together, and whether each one earns its place.

You often describe that a feeling leads a project. Can you elaborate on how this intuition guided you through the TERMINO collaboration?

When I connect with a brief, the project becomes a feeling. My process is guided by a sense of what the project should be. 

With TERMINO it started from the pavilion concept, which was all steel. That already carries something precise and material. But working through it I realised it felt too cold, too enclosed — so the space grew, and I divided it into three zones: kitchen, living room, bedroom. From there the decisions followed instinctively. The exterior walls I had planned began to feel wrong. A glass box felt more honest — a 360-degree relationship with the surrounding landscape, nature becoming part of the interior.

From there it became a conversation between materials and sensation. The acoustic ceiling came from thinking about morning — wanting that first experience of the day to be soft and unhurried. The stone floor was the counterweight to all that steel and glass — not warm in temperature, but connected to something organic. Forest. Earth. Heated underfoot, it becomes something you want to move through barefoot.

I don't have a linear method. I make a decision, something feels wrong, I change it, part of it feels right and I keep that. The project moves forward that way — always led by whether something feels resolved or not.

Iteration is central to your process. How do you know when a design has reached clarity and coherence?

Sometimes, I have to just decide that, okay, now it's now it's ready. Especially if were pushing deadlines. 

The process involves a lot of iterations. I might take one brief, one feeling, and produce ten completely different versions from it — quite radical variations, all working from the same starting point. The final result is usually somewhere in the combination of those. A detail from one version, a solution from another, and then it gradually becomes one thing. You just spend a lot of hours with it. Sometimes I step away for a day deliberately, create some distance, and then come back and find the project again.

With the TERMINO collaboration — the pavilion I mentioned was actually a personal project from 2018, nothing to do with TERMINO at the time. It was just a steel box I had been trying to make liveable. Lucas was the one who visualised it, he made all the renderings. So what you see in the TERMINO collaboration is essentially the final version of that pavilion design — though it looks almost nothing like where it started. The pavilion was just the concept, the idea of a steel building. That was the starting point.

This project emphasizes modularity, and especially like you were already mentioning spatial fluidity. How did the TERMINO kitchen shape your choices for designing the space? 

A lot of it comes down to the exterior — the building stands on steel stilts, which immediately references the TERMINO modules. The sleekness, the materiality, the logic of assembly. The modules are quite easy to read — you understand how they go together, they're industrial without being complicated. I wanted the building to have that same quality. Stilts, base, pillars, roof. A very simple structure. Nothing hidden, nothing decorative. The same steel, the same minimal language, nothing added that doesn't need to be there. Which is, again, just how I think about design.

TERMINOs design philosophy overlaps quite a lot with yours. 

Yes. I was personally interested in Termino's modular systems before this project, so that just felt like a good match. The modularity shaped this project's framework nicely. 

Are there other forms or materials you have been wanting to explore?

Collaborations. I am also interested in mixing materials, ceramics with textiles, wire, or stone.

How do you imagine your work evolving?

I hope I never stop experimenting. The moment we believe we have the answer is the moment we begin to stagnate. I hope the world remains kind enough to allow me to pursue this, and that I can continue to follow my intuition, regardless of circumstance.

How would you describe your own work?

A balance between control and surrender. A mix of processes and reflections.

What is currently haunting and driving your practice?

Intuition is the driving force. I am fascinated by theoretical frameworks in design. My "Creature" series, for example, is based on Carl Jung's archetypes. What I find most beautiful is that people always recognise something familiar in these hybrid beings — everyone projects something of their own.

How do you balance privacy without really utilizing walls in the classical sense?

The space is designed for two people — private, but with enough room for guests.

What makes it work spatially are the two cores. It acts as a dividing wall without closing the space off completely. You move freely around it, but the rooms are genuinely separated — you can't see from the bedroom into the kitchen, which in a space this size is not something you take for granted. It's open but not entirely open. Semi-open, maybe. If you want to close the bedroom off completely, sliding doors integrated into the core would do it.

The core also carries most of the functional load — toilet between the bedroom and living room, fridge, kitchen cabinets, wardrobe. When you come in via the central staircase the wardrobe is immediately to the left, built into the core wall. No separate furniture, no cabinets standing out from the wall. Everything contained, everything serving the structure.

The fireplace was a deliberate choice over the more obvious solutions — layering in textures, adding small lights, decorating toward warmth. Instead, one real fire. A natural element that does the same work more honestly.

CREDITS

Editor

Alma Leandra

Visualized by

Lukasz Staniewski

There is a discipline in architecture that is often invoked but rarely sustained: the decision to stop adding and begin removing. Ludwig Mies van der Rohe described it as almost nothing. Dieter Rams framed it as as little design as possible. Both point to the same premise — that reduction is not absence, but precision. What remains must be enough.

Alvar Sakari works from that position. Trained in Copenhagen and now based in Helsinki, his practice is defined less by addition than by subtraction — of material, of ornament, of unnecessary resolution. Returning to Finland, he brought with him a sensibility that sits slightly outside the prevailing pace of the local context.

His collaboration, AT Peace with TERMINO emerged from a personal project: a steel pavilion conceptualized in 2018. Visualized by Lukasz Staniewski, Alvar built out the space in which the TERMINO kitchen does not appear as an object, but as a continuation of the same logic — modular, industrial, and materially consistent with the architecture itself.

Alma Leandra spoke to him about restraint, designing for a culture that values individuality yet reproduces sameness, and about the challenge of making something genuinely good from as little as possible.

What prompted your decision to return to Finland and establish your own studio?

Copenhagen felt like the right place to study, but returning home was important, to reconnect, and to understand the market I actually wanted to work in. The timing wasn't ideal, the industry there moves slowly. But starting my own studio had always been the goal, and doing it from home felt more grounded than trying to do it abroad.

Does designing in your home country give you more creative autonomy?

What I notice is that Finnish interest in German and Danish design is genuinely growing — but it arrives two to four years late. The appetite is there, it just lags. I'm not sure Finnish audiences are ready for a brutalist sensibility yet. They respect steel and industrial language, but there's a difference between respect and readiness. Committing to that aesthetic in your own home requires a confidence that is still developing there. Many want to be international, and are drawn to what's coming out of Berlin — but translating that into actual purchasing decisions is a different thing entirely. That gap is where I want to push my work.

Would you say there's a lack of individualism in Finland?

Most want to feel different, but then end up doing the same thing without realising it. It used to be a very particular sameness — clean, simple, deliberately understated. Now there's a collective push toward something grittier and more expressive. Which would be interesting, except it's already a few years old everywhere else. Everything arrives late, so by the time something feels like a statement here, it has already moved on somewhere else.

Does this push you in your design process to also go more against that? How does it affect your work, living in such a culture? 

I just do what I personally find interesting — and I think more people are genuinely curious about design now, partly because we're at an age where we're starting to make real decisions about our own homes.

That said, I still feel like most people gravitate toward the same familiar names, the big Scandinavian brands, the ones that feel safe and accessible. Which they are. But that accessibility comes from scale and mass production is what makes them affordable. Most end up with the same bedsheets, the same lights, the same vases, and somehow still feel like they have a personal point of view on design. It's a bit like fashion in that way, the desire to feel individual expressed through the exact same things everyone else is buying.

TERMINO is something different. It reads like a company that is genuinely trying to do something outside that logic. Which I respect. It's a niche proposition. 

Your work emphasizes material and ornamental reduction, what draws you to this restraint, and how do you decide what is essential in the space?

Ornamentation doesn't have to mean decoration in the traditional sense. It can be as quiet as a specific screw or the foot of a module. My instinct is always to remove what isn't necessary. You could call it minimalism, though ornamentation itself is such a broad concept that the label almost doesn't matter.

What interests me is the challenge of designing something for exactly what it is. When you strip away unnecessary detail, you stop masking the space and start revealing it. Light becomes a material, an ornament. A limited palette of materials creates a kind of calm — fewer competing textures means less visual noise, and the space can finally speak for itself.

I think a lot of projects that are considered successful are really just heavily decorated. Fill a room with designer pieces and people will call it beautiful, but they're responding to the objects, not the space. The room itself might be quite ordinary. The same logic applies to furniture. A chair can be lifted entirely by a fabric you happen to like, and suddenly the chair feels considered when really it's just the textile doing the work.

It's deeply subjective, which makes it hard to argue. But my position is fairly simple: if you can make something genuinely good using as little as possible, then you've actually made something. You see it, you understand it, you don't have to be told what it is. And I think that understanding comes down to assembly — how the parts come together, and whether each one earns its place.

You often describe that a feeling leads a project. Can you elaborate on how this intuition guided you through the TERMINO collaboration?

When I connect with a brief, the project becomes a feeling. My process is guided by a sense of what the project should be. 

With TERMINO it started from the pavilion concept, which was all steel. That already carries something precise and material. But working through it I realised it felt too cold, too enclosed — so the space grew, and I divided it into three zones: kitchen, living room, bedroom. From there the decisions followed instinctively. The exterior walls I had planned began to feel wrong. A glass box felt more honest — a 360-degree relationship with the surrounding landscape, nature becoming part of the interior.

From there it became a conversation between materials and sensation. The acoustic ceiling came from thinking about morning — wanting that first experience of the day to be soft and unhurried. The stone floor was the counterweight to all that steel and glass — not warm in temperature, but connected to something organic. Forest. Earth. Heated underfoot, it becomes something you want to move through barefoot.

I don't have a linear method. I make a decision, something feels wrong, I change it, part of it feels right and I keep that. The project moves forward that way — always led by whether something feels resolved or not.

Iteration is central to your process. How do you know when a design has reached clarity and coherence?

Sometimes, I have to just decide that, okay, now it's now it's ready. Especially if were pushing deadlines. 

The process involves a lot of iterations. I might take one brief, one feeling, and produce ten completely different versions from it — quite radical variations, all working from the same starting point. The final result is usually somewhere in the combination of those. A detail from one version, a solution from another, and then it gradually becomes one thing. You just spend a lot of hours with it. Sometimes I step away for a day deliberately, create some distance, and then come back and find the project again.

With the TERMINO collaboration — the pavilion I mentioned was actually a personal project from 2018, nothing to do with TERMINO at the time. It was just a steel box I had been trying to make liveable. Lucas was the one who visualised it, he made all the renderings. So what you see in the TERMINO collaboration is essentially the final version of that pavilion design — though it looks almost nothing like where it started. The pavilion was just the concept, the idea of a steel building. That was the starting point.

This project emphasizes modularity, and especially like you were already mentioning spatial fluidity. How did the TERMINO kitchen shape your choices for designing the space? 

A lot of it comes down to the exterior — the building stands on steel stilts, which immediately references the TERMINO modules. The sleekness, the materiality, the logic of assembly. The modules are quite easy to read — you understand how they go together, they're industrial without being complicated. I wanted the building to have that same quality. Stilts, base, pillars, roof. A very simple structure. Nothing hidden, nothing decorative. The same steel, the same minimal language, nothing added that doesn't need to be there. Which is, again, just how I think about design.

TERMINOs design philosophy overlaps quite a lot with yours. 

Yes. I was personally interested in Termino's modular systems before this project, so that just felt like a good match. The modularity shaped this project's framework nicely. 

Are there other forms or materials you have been wanting to explore?

Collaborations. I am also interested in mixing materials, ceramics with textiles, wire, or stone.

How do you imagine your work evolving?

I hope I never stop experimenting. The moment we believe we have the answer is the moment we begin to stagnate. I hope the world remains kind enough to allow me to pursue this, and that I can continue to follow my intuition, regardless of circumstance.

How would you describe your own work?

A balance between control and surrender. A mix of processes and reflections.

What is currently haunting and driving your practice?

Intuition is the driving force. I am fascinated by theoretical frameworks in design. My "Creature" series, for example, is based on Carl Jung's archetypes. What I find most beautiful is that people always recognise something familiar in these hybrid beings — everyone projects something of their own.

How do you balance privacy without really utilizing walls in the classical sense?

The space is designed for two people — private, but with enough room for guests.

What makes it work spatially are the two cores. It acts as a dividing wall without closing the space off completely. You move freely around it, but the rooms are genuinely separated — you can't see from the bedroom into the kitchen, which in a space this size is not something you take for granted. It's open but not entirely open. Semi-open, maybe. If you want to close the bedroom off completely, sliding doors integrated into the core would do it.

The core also carries most of the functional load — toilet between the bedroom and living room, fridge, kitchen cabinets, wardrobe. When you come in via the central staircase the wardrobe is immediately to the left, built into the core wall. No separate furniture, no cabinets standing out from the wall. Everything contained, everything serving the structure.

The fireplace was a deliberate choice over the more obvious solutions — layering in textures, adding small lights, decorating toward warmth. Instead, one real fire. A natural element that does the same work more honestly.

CREDITS

Editor

Alma Leandra

Visualized by

Lukasz Staniewski

The Latin term, Lux, is used to describe both “light” and "luxury." In its original sense, luxury means excess, but in contemporary visual language, it has manifested itself as restraint: controlled highlights and negatives, surfaces that absorb rather than reflect, and a play of light. 

DEPENDE is a design studio founded in the pursuit of creating non-duplicating designs, - Alma Leandra speaks to the design studio on repetition in design and what it means to design on a context-basis. 

Valencia has a very particular quality of Mediterranean light. Did the city itself inform the decision to build around natural light, or was that driven purely by the space you were working with?

Context plays a fundamental role when thinking about a project. In Valencia, light is not just a condition but a defining quality of space. In Sant Vicent, the project originates from the intention to distribute natural light throughout the entire apartment by means of a luminous core, a central element capable of filtering and extending it across different rooms. The fact that the apartment is located on a high floor allows it to receive an abundant and consistent amount of daylight, which became part of the starting point of the design. This strategy enables most daily activities to take place without artificial lighting, while also reinforcing a sense of continuity between spaces.

If light is the organising principle of the apartment, does that create a gradient/areas that are intentionally darker or more withdrawn, or does light move through the space more democratically?

Allowing certain areas to remain less illuminated is often more interesting, creating a sense of depth and ambiguity. Rather than pursuing a fully homogeneous lighting scheme (which might be a bit flat), we were interested in working with gradients and transitions. The luminous core produces an intensity that gradually fades as it reaches the perimeter of the apartment, allowing shadows and softer atmospheres to emerge. This controlled variation introduces a quieter, more nuanced spatial experience, where light is not evenly distributed but carefully modulated. 

The glass blocks have a very specific visual character, that pressed circular pattern carries a particular cultural memory, somewhere between 1960s Italian modernism and Mediterranean domestic architecture. Was that reference intentional, or were you primarily thinking about what the material does optically?

We don’t usually begin from explicit references, but from questions and conversations that emerge within the project itself. In Sant Vicent, the starting point was how to bring natural light into every part of the apartment without fragmenting the space. The luminous core appears as a response to that condition, concentrating and redistributing light from a single element. Interestingly, while reflecting on the project now, we realised it has something in common with optical systems like Fresnel lenses used in lighthouses. It wasn't intentional at all, but we find it quite funny how these kinds of associations just show up afterwards.

The glass block does two things simultaneously, it lets light through and it breaks it apart. Which of those effects were you actually designing for?

It operates in both ways. It allows natural light to enter and reach deeper into the apartment, while also filtering and softening it, avoiding direct glare. This modulation is further reinforced by the dark carpet flooring, which absorbs excess light and prevents harsh reflections. We like to think that these elements create a more controlled and comfortable visual environment.

You've described a moment where you stepped back from Sant Vicent and realised the issue was material, not spatial. How do you know when to stop solving spatially and start looking elsewhere?

We reached a point where the spatial logic of the project was already working in a coherent way. The relationship between the three volumes felt balanced and clearly defined. At that moment, the question shifted: what if one of these elements could take on an additional role? What if it could generate enough light to reduce artificial lighting to a minimum? This question led us to reconsider the role of the luminous core, not just as a spatial device, but as an atmospheric one.

Did the TERMINO kitchen act as an anchor within the apartment, or did you try to dissolve it into the overall composition?

Our approach to the kitchen always depends on the project. In this case, we understood from the beginning that it would take on a certain presence, functioning as a freestanding element rather than being embedded into the architecture. In that sense, it operates more as an anchor within the space, not by dominating it, but by establishing a clear point of reference within a largely continuous environment. The intention was not to dissolve it completely, but neither to treat it as an isolated object. Instead, it sits in a subtle balance between autonomy and integration. At that point, we started wondering: what if its material definition could reinforce this condition, allowing it to be perceived as a distinct piece while still participating in the overall spatial continuity? This ambiguity was important for us, as it avoids a hierarchical reading and allows the kitchen to engage with the space in a more open and flexible way.

Some architects design the kitchen last, as a practical conclusion to a spatial concept. Others start there. Where did the TERMINO kitchen sit in your process?

Even if it reads as an individual object, the kitchen was always considered an essential part of the project. It was not a late insertion, but something that was present from the early stages of the design process. Its position and role were defined alongside the main spatial decisions, particularly in relation to the void created by the three volumes within the apartment.

The kitchen is a steel object in a space that is largely warm and soft. Did you want it to feel foreign to its surroundings, or integrated?

Although it may initially read as a cold object due to its materiality, the stainless steel kitchen behaves in a more nuanced way. Its reflective surface captures and reinterprets the darker and warmer tones of the surrounding space, allowing it to shift depending on light and movement. This was an intentional decision from the beginning. Rather than remaining isolated, it subtly participates in the overall atmosphere of the apartment. What appears as a rigid, industrial element becomes a responsive surface that integrates itself within a more continuous and layered spatial experience.

Did working within TERMINO's modular system change any decisions you made about the space around it, - or did the space come first and the kitchen had to find its place within it?

This is less a question of hierarchy and more of dialogue. The space set the initial framework, establishing the main relationships within the apartment. Working with TERMINO’s modular system then introduced a level of precision that helped refine those initial decisions. Its modularity allowed us to find proportions and dimensions that felt appropriate for the project. This interplay enabled the kitchen to feel both integrated and precise, reinforcing the overall coherence of the space.

Where is the line between restraint and under-designing, know when a space has enough?- how do you

This feels quite difficult to answer. For us, restraint is not about doing less, but about doing only what is necessary. The line appears when every element in the space has a clear role and nothing feels arbitrary. When additional gestures stop reinforcing the idea and begin to dilute it, that’s usually the moment to stop. At the same time, this threshold is often shaped by external conditions, such as timelines and client expectations, which tend to define that line more quickly than we sometimes would. Rather than seeing this as a limitation, we understand it as part of the process, a framework that forces decisions to remain precise without losing clarity.

Is there something you wanted to do in this project that you held back from? And do you think the space is better for it?

Not really. If anything, we’re more interested in understanding how these decisions will continue to evolve over time. The space is not seen as something fixed, but as something that adapts through use, where its qualities can shift and be reinterpreted beyond the initial design.

CREDITS

Editor

Alma Leandra

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