A space dedicated to honey—a symbol of pleasure and care—interpreted from a contained, almost austere atmosphere.
The project is situated within the tension between the organic and the mineral.
A reading that takes the material memory of Berlin as its reference, where the raw and the essential build identity.
The intervention is minimal.
The existing space is maintained as a framework, allowing matter to activate the experience.
The continuous pebble floor introduces a constant tactile dimension. Irregular and vibrant, it collects light and fragments it, generating a shifting perception.
The concrete walls, inspired by the mass of bunkers and monoliths, contain the space and lend it density. Natural light, filtered from the facade, glides over these surfaces without imposing itself, revealing nuances and depths.
The material palette is precise.
Pebble, concrete, corten steel, and ceramic build a coherent system where each element has a specific weight.
At its core, a ceramic lattice evokes the geometry of a honeycomb. Its repetition creates rhythm and filters the view, introducing an intermediate scale between the body and the architecture.
The Corten steel furniture integrates into the building envelope with an almost monolithic logic.
The displays, conceived as stone pieces, situate the product on a sculptural plane, distancing it from any conventional retail reading.
In the center, a reclaimed metal sink introduces an almost ritualistic dimension.
An unexpected gesture that connects with care from an intimate perspective.
The space is completed with a dialogue between times.
Contemporary pieces, such as lighting from Apparatus, coexist with reclaimed elements, creating a balanced tension between past and present.
HONEYZ is perceived as an ascetic and precise composition.
An environment where matter, light, and form construct a silent, almost dreamlike atmosphere that transforms the relationship with the object.