Our product design team works to strike a balance between the emotional and the practical.

Surf was born from a Carlo Molteni's challenge. “If you think you’re good, design a sofa.” The Surf sofa evolved over five years into a piece shaped by curiosity, context, and the pursuit of a sectional that feels more fluid than modular.
“You know, this is so beautiful and unique from every angle.” A lot of sofas look generic from the back. Of course, then he asked Vincent Van Duysen, the creative director of Molteni, what he thought, and Van Duysen said, “It’s nice, but it’s not Molteni.” But Carlo Molteni said, “I’m doing it anyway.” - Glenn Pushelberg
Surf began not with a concept of modularity, but with the feeling of fluid motion. Instead of the rigid geometry typical of sectional systems, we looked to the motion of water and waves, shaping a form that flows in every direction. Working closely with Molteni & C, we sketched, carved, stretched fabric, and engineered side by side to explore both potential and constraint. The result is a modular system that behaves with flexibility but appears as a singular, sculptural gesture—comfortable, calm, and quietly confident in any space.

Our partnership with Tribu is defined by shared values—restraint, precision, sustainability, and a commitment to pushing outdoor furniture beyond expectation. Together, we explore how clarity in design can balance craftsmanship with environmental responsibility.
The collaboration with Tribu began with a shared respect for subtlety that grew into a partnership spanning four collections. Each piece was shaped in context, considering how it lives within architecture, landscape, and daily routines, resulting in collections that feel light, quiet, and deeply considered. Balancing expressive form with Tribu's engineering precision opened new possibilities: the suspended bridge dynamism of Nodi, the cocooned softness of Elio, and the indoor outdoor fluidity of Amanu. Designed to mix across collections, each piece contributes to a cohesive story, while reinforcing a shared belief that simplicity, executed with rigor, can be transformative.

Moxy Times Square redefined the North American micro-hotel concept, and the product collection set the benchmark across forty properties, establishing a new standard for compact hospitality.
We approached the collection as a toolkit shaped by the realities of compact living, with foldable pieces, integrated storage, and multi-use furniture that combine the ingenuity of urban camping with the spatial discipline of traditional ryokans. Each product was developed within real room typologies to ensure that proportions, behaviors, and touch points support comfort, movement, and joy in small footprints. The result is a scalable, character-rich system that brings warmth, play, and consistency to every Moxy hotel while reinforcing the brand’s adventurous spirit.

La Samaritaine’s revival demanded a fixture system that honored 150 years of Art Nouveau and Art Deco heritage while introducing a modern, functional retail language that unites history, craft, and commerce in support of the store’s contemporary identity.
The display fixtures were conceived as quiet narrators of La Samaritaine’s history, supporting both the building’s architecture and the brands within. Designed to harmonize with Jourdain’s expressive structure, the fixtures feature fine lines and curved gestures that pay homage to the Art Nouveau façade, along with material restraint that allows the landmark building to remain the protagonist. The design embraces local cues, drawing on the spirit of the Parisian flâneur and the shallow floor plates that encourage strolling, pausing, and discovery. The fixtures guide circulation without dictating it, quietly choreographing how people move and how merchandise is revealed.

