Interior bedroom with large glass windows, wooden vertical slats, and a view of a porch with a red-leafed tree outside.

The Meridian Series is guided by an interest in how space is felt rather than simply measured. Rooms are shaped around volume, light, and moments of quiet separation, allowing compact footprints to feel generous and composed. Openings are placed with intention, drawing the eye upward or outward to soften enclosure and create a sense of depth. The result is an interior experience that feels calm and expansive, defined by proportion and atmosphere rather than program.

Meridian Series

A modern house with extensive glass walls, wooden panels, and a small outdoor garden with colorful plants.

2025

New York

Outdoor rooms are treated as extensions of the interior rather than leftover space. Deep overhangs and layered thresholds blur the line between inside and out, creating sheltered zones that feel deliberate and inhabitable. These transitional moments slow the experience of moving through the home, offering shade, compression, and release. By shaping the space around edges and shelter, the architecture invites daily rituals to unfold naturally between interior and landscape.

Modern backyard with a small outdoor kitchen, glass doors, lush green lawn, and a car parked on a raised area behind a wooden fence.
A modern kitchen and dining area with a round wooden table set with four glasses and a vase with orange fruits, surrounded by teal chairs, and featuring wooden slats on the walls and ceiling.

Living spaces are arranged to feel connected without collapsing into a single moment. Areas for rest, gathering, and daily activity sit in quiet dialogue with one another, separated just enough to preserve intimacy while maintaining a sense of flow. Rather than relying on walls, the architecture uses alignment, sightlines, and shifts in volume to define purpose. This approach allows the home to feel cohesive and composed, where movement between spaces feels intuitive and unforced.

Modern bathroom with gray tile walls, black fixtures, a white tub with steam rising, a round mirror, a wooden vanity with a white sink, a black faucet, and a green plant

Private spaces are conceived as quiet retreats, set slightly apart and revealed through layers rather than direct exposure. Views are filtered, not announced, allowing light and air to enter while maintaining a sense of seclusion. These moments rely on restraint; careful placement of openings, softened transitions, and controlled visibility; to create spaces that feel protected yet connected. The result is an atmosphere of calm where privacy is not achieved by enclosure alone, but by thoughtful distance and proportion.

Modern house with a rounded black roof, white walls, and front landscaping including bushes and a wooden slatted fence.

Architecture recedes rather than competes. Forms remain low and composed, allowing the structure to sit comfortably within its surroundings without drawing undue attention. This restraint is intentional; an understanding that good design doesn’t need to declare itself to be felt. The Meridian Series is shaped to belong, offering a refined presence that reveals itself gradually through use, light, and time rather than first impression.