Welcome to our blog — where design is as alive as your grandma’s garden
Hi there!
We’re a team of architects, designers, and lovers of beautiful spaces – always armed with a ruler, a notebook, and a suspicious amount of coffee.
This blog is our way of sharing:

  • thoughts that come to us during morning yoga or in the middle of the night,
  • sketches that are way too good to stay hidden in a drawer,
  • and stories about how we tame wild forms and even wilder projects.
What to expect?
  • How not to lose your mind choosing tiles.
  • Why a flower bed is never “just a flower bed” – it’s a philosophical statement.
  • What’s the difference between “cozy” and “designer cozy” (spoiler: the price).
  • And the eternal question: why bother at all, when you could just drop two sun loungers and call it a day?

We love laughing – at ourselves, at the world, and occasionally at the concept of “minimalism with personality.”
But behind every joke, there’s a little bit of professional magic.

So get comfortable.
Write to us. Judge our fonts.

We’re definitely reading – and probably already tweaking them.
Spring in England demands attention to detail
  • An article by our photographer
    Dora Granaturova, England/Cambridge
  • Website support
    by Svetlana Bosetskaya

Soft, diffused light is one of the key tools.
It avoids harsh contrasts while enhancing colour and form.

Petals scattered on the ground often make for a more compelling shot than the trees themselves.
And people in the frame add scale and a sense of the moment — especially during that in-between weather when winter hasn’t fully let go.

It’s important not to rush.
Blooming changes almost daily, and the same park can look completely different in the morning and in the evening.
Sketches in conceptual solution

A concept for a private residential house, developed through fast sketching with a focus on volume, spatial scenarios, and the relationship with the site.
The solution is based on breaking the mass into several blocks, forming an internal courtyard and orienting key areas towards both private and open spaces.
Planning logic and facade articulation evolve simultaneously, without rigid stage separation.
This series shows how an architectural idea can be shaped without excessive detailing.
The sketches capture not the form itself, but the sequence of decisions: site placement, functional distribution, volume, and light.
This is not “quick drawing” — it’s a compressed thinking model, where minimal lines reflect an understanding of structure, scale, and spatial behavior.
Such an approach allows rapid testing of ideas and filtering out weak solutions before moving into detailed development.