In the Ourânia building, this apartment draws the architecture inward.
On the ground floor, Portuguese mosaic flooring flows seamlessly from the garden into the living room. This continuous surface blurs the boundary between inside and out, as plants brush against the glass, the garden view remains uninterrupted, and nature quietly seeps into the interior.
Freijó wood wraps walls, ceilings, and shelves, enveloping the spaces with warmth and intimacy. Complementing this atmosphere, a curated selection of Brazilian design pieces anchors the home in earthy tones and rich, welcoming colors.
Upstairs, the family room becomes the heart of the home — a shared space that connects two distinct realms: the master suite on one side and the children’s wing on the other. Separate and private, yet tied together by this central node.
The modulation of the façade offered the freedom to entirely rethink the plan, allowing interior and architecture to converse in the same language: measured, tactile, and serene.