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Sloft Édition 09 - Free shipping until December 10th

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Space is the place

According to the UN, there should be close to 9.6 billion people on Earth by 2050, and most of them concentrated in cities. This is happening in parallel to our planet’s habitable surface dwindling under the pressure of rising sea levels and desertification. The notion of “sharing space” is thus taking on an increasingly weighty, almost critical tenor. Here at Sloft, we have been contributing to the building of this idea, in our own way, for a few years now. By promoting more compact design for housing, we’ve been able to imagine beautifully stimulating and originally sensible solutions to help urban dwellers envision a refuge in our ever-expanding megacities.

In this ninth bilingual edition:

  • 8 Exclusive Home Tours:

In Charenton, in Paris, in Marseille or Sydney, our new selection reveals homes that feel deeply attuned — almost like extensions of their inhabitants’ bodies — helping them situate themselves physically within their surroundings and giving them the sense of being truly in place. This is the miracle of “lived-in” dwellings, as philosopher Céline Bonicco-Donato calls them, as opposed to “interchangeable” homes for perpetual “visitors,” who may, in doing so, end up monopolizing the space (and resources) of others.

  • A special feature on interior architecture: Sleeping at the Villa Medici

The age of the “Xanadus” is behind us — those sumptuous private estates epitomized by Charles Foster Kane’s domain in Orson Welles’s Citizen Kane, a kind of primitive Mar-a-Lago inspired by historic princely residences. The Villa Medici in Rome, by contrast, moves with the times, pushing openness and the sharing of its magnificent spaces even further. A haven for artists, it is becoming a haven for all through its program converting former live-in studios into guest rooms.

  • An exclusive interview with the artist Pier Stockholm

To experience the interiority of one’s shelter as a motionless exploration of self and world is to open up vast spaces without monopolizing the Earth. Artist Pier Stockholm conceives of his studio as a first life-envelope into which he fits others, culminating in his “hut,” a poetic, exploratory refuge where he replenishes himself and expands his creative and spiritual horizons. For astrophysicist Aurélien Barrau is convinced: rather than trying to unravel every secret of the universe in a technological frenzy that propels us into interstellar emptiness, we should embrace the world’s mystery by cultivating our poetic gaze. And in doing so — by preserving it — we share it with all living beings.

Eclecticism, poetry, art, escapism, beauty and good ideas are definitely not a function of square metres!

"Tenth-by-Sea", Johanna and Hugo’s southern escapade, 73 sqm in Paris

There’s a Riviera-like atmosphere drifting through the space… A pool, mosaic tiles, pastel light: every detail evokes the South, the sun, and that gentle feeling of endless holidays.

The project, conceived by interior architects Johanna Lapray and Hugo L’ahelec of Studio Acte Deux, sketches out a world where boundaries fade away.

“We wanted to blur the lines between indoors and outdoors, like an open cabanon.”

And to bring this free and joyful scenography to life, we imagined a shared apartment inhabited by two young models, Sara and Raphaella.

"Concretely Speaking", Light becomes matter at Séréline and Matéo’s, 30 sqm in Paris

It all begins with a studio. At the back of a courtyard in the Haut-Marais, above what had long been a fabrication space, Matéo and Séréline make their first purchase — and take on their own construction site.

“Our future home will be the opposite of everything one typically expects from a Parisian interior (moldings, herringbone parquet, etc.): an atmosphere from elsewhere, so we can disconnect the moment we walk through the door,” they explain.

Both owners and architects of their project, they shape the space the way one writes a self-portrait, thinking as much about daily life (working together, hosting, slowing down) as about the desires that guide them. Yesterday’s workshop has become their laboratory of today.

"Cubism, squared", Hadar and family’s boundless 3D living, 60 sqm in Montrouge

Hadar took advantage of the colossal ceiling heights of her former Montrouge workshop to implement a new way of organizing family living. The space – and thus everyday living – are tiered structure: “We liked the idea of creating this kind of mini-theater in an apartment”, explains architect Jean Benoît Vétillard.

From now on, everything fits into a single room. “If someone gets upset, the house gets upset,” says Hadar.

This light-wood structure embodies this new way of living — together and in motion. For that, Hadar thanks it regularly in a silent ritual.

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