Inside Out is a complex yet minimal renovation project. The house is conceived around principles of spiritual light and dematerialized white spaces. Each lighting gesture emerges from an analysis of historical buildings in the neighborhood, translating their qualities into a contemporary interplay of illumination and architectural form.
The transformation does not seek to impose itself, but rather to reveal what is already present—light, silence, proportion. Walls are treated as veils rather than boundaries, allowing light to drift, gather, and dissolve across surfaces. Openings are carefully recalibrated to frame the passing of the day: soft morning radiance, the still brightness of noon, the warm descent toward evening.
Materials are chosen for their quietness. White becomes not a color but a medium, a backdrop against which the subtleties of luminosity can unfold. Textures are reduced to essentials so that shadows can speak. The spatial sequence flows gently from room to room, guided less by physical thresholds than by shifts in atmosphere.
Through this approach, the house becomes a vessel for an almost meditative experience. It invites inhabitants to slow down, to notice, to reconnect with the rhythms of their surroundings. The dialogue with the historic neighborhood grounds the project in continuity, while its refined minimalism offers a fresh, contemporary interpretation.
Inside Out ultimately unfolds as an architecture of light—quiet, deliberate, and deeply attuned to the interplay between space, memory, and perception.
