ENSO 120 sq.m
2023
Armchair - Ligne Roset
Candles - Hypsoe
Floor lamp - Davide Groppi
Hallway
Projector - Samsung The Premiere
Sofa - Boca Room
Living room
Laundry
Kitchen
Freestanding bathtub - Inbani
Plumbing - CEA Design
Natural light appears wherever it can. In the bathroom, reflected in a mirror, it doubles in strength and traces the clean lines of the architecture. The room is just 3.4 sq.m. — yet the walls never close in. One mirror, in the right place. The laundry is concealed behind wooden panels — the same material as the sliding door, set slightly recessed to read as a doorway rather than built-in storage. A small spatial trick that shifts the perception of the room entirely.
Chairs - Karimoku Case Study
Fireplace — Antonio Lupi
Storage systems - Rimadesio "Zenit"
Table lamp - Menu Space
Ceiling Lighting System - Davide Groppi
Enso is our interpretation of Japanese domestic architecture brought into the present. No doors. No furniture accumulating where it shouldn't. Japanese philosophy distilled: say little, mean much.
The house is a true open space — just two doors in the entire volume, the entrance and the laundry. Everything else is divided by partitions. The foundation is stepped, creating two floor levels that loosely separate the communal zone — kitchen and living room — from the private: bedroom, wardrobe and bathroom.
The concept is rooted in the circle — the absolute form of harmony. Rounded, flowing shapes run through the entire interior, adding a quietly futuristic quality, while light wood and raw clay-textured walls pull the space back toward nature. The point is not to follow a style precisely, but to arrive at a feeling — of familiar surfaces, of being connected to something natural.