Livinwow: The first home design innovation center
Livinwow is the first Design Innovation Center to respond to the growing demand for new interior concepts, intended for the inhabitants of Generation X up to the Millennials.
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Livinwow is the first Design Innovation Center to respond to the growing demand for new interior concepts, intended for the inhabitants of Generation X up to the Millennials.
Read moreThe Oscar Niemeyer Auditorium is a sparkling white auditorium, home to the annual Ravello Festival, as well as performances by internationally renowned artists and dance companies.
Read moreWabi sabi is an oriental philosophy that accepts the passage of time, enhancing its defects. An interior style based on the concept of accepting imperfection and enhancing the beauty of small things.
Read moreIn recent decades, museum architecture has undergone important transformations: from a niche object of cultural interest it has become a “mass” artistic phenomenon. Today a museum is a communication tool and, at the same time, a point of reference at the level of the urban landscape.
Read moreÈ innegabile che da diversi anni il binomio cibo e architettura ha subito un profondo e drastico cambiamento, infatti i locali dove oggi si gusta il cibo sono dei veri e propri laboratori di sapori e tendenze sia in termini culinari che architettonici.
Read moreThe conception of a living and liquid relationship with the ‘fragments of space’, which characterize the urban network, will be the cornerstone in the thinking of Perec and Matta-Clark who, through an essentially individualistic approach, touched upon active experimentation of a situationist nature.
Read moreIn the center of Florence, the industrial style of the offices of Guido Guidi Ricevimenti combines with modern classicism to create stylistic contrasts that harmonize the space, while maintaining the elements of the historic architecture that characterized the property.
Read moreThe new generation of “barefoot architects”, as Friedman defines them, are a key figure in addressing the question of conceiving the construction of structures for a reality that sees an increasingly complex relationship between man and environment.
Read moreA “smoking room for private apartments” designed by Dunand, with walls over three meters high in lacquered wood, lacquered metal and gilded wood installed between 1930 and 1936 in the Parisian apartment of Mademoiselle Colette Aboucaya.
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