On the dry, sculptural island of Schinousa — a Cycladic fragment of the Aegean Sea — Maison Cheval emerges as an architecture born from the earth itself. Its form follows the island’s undulating topography, where stone walls and winding paths unfold like ribbons across the hillsides. The curved dry-stone walls trace the natural contours of the land, while the terrain itself dissolves into the sea through a series of wide, embracing coves — natural harbors and beaches that define the island’s rhythm. Here, land and sea meet in a choreography of light and shadow.
Having listened, observed, and read the landscape, the architects sought to imagine what kind of structure could truly belong here. They searched for the soul of the building — and envisioned it in the spirit of a horse, a French cheval: proud and composed, strong yet graceful, standing calmly against the slopes. It became both metaphor and muse — a creature in perfect balance with its terrain. The intention was for the architecture to leave nothing more than the kind of trace a horse’s hooves might imprint on the soil — a gesture that binds effortlessly with the land, humble yet enduring.
The result is a partially embedded dwelling, a continuous sequence of flowing curves that echo the surrounding relief. Designed to appear as if emerging from the earth, the residence unfolds along a hillside overlooking the sea, its composition guided by the natural curvature of the terrain. Stone walls rise from the ground, reinforcing the rhythm of the curves and spatial transitions, framing views, and defining thresholds between interior and exterior.
Architecture here forms concave gestures reminiscent of sea inlets — intimate cavities that cradle the living spaces — while the convex extensions of terraces and pools unfold outward like petals, opening gently to welcome the morning light.
Rising subtly from the landscape, the stone walls and sculpted roofs compose a rhythm of movement and stillness. Earth-toned materials, soft transitions, and filtered light establish a serene dialogue between architecture and nature. The play of curves and light accentuates textures and materiality, dissolving the boundary between built and natural.
Maison Cheval does not impose itself upon the island; it continues it. Through curves, voids, and the slow movement of light, it becomes an inhabitable topography — a quiet testament to harmony, strength, and belonging.