Exterior rooms occupy a threshold — neither fully interior nor entirely landscape. Their furnishing requires a discipline of its own.

In many projects, architectural and landscape decisions are made early and with precision. Furnishings are often introduced later, without equal consideration of scale, sight lines, circulation or seasonality.

The objective is a balanced house — one in which architecture, landscape and furnishing are conceived as a single composition, rather than as successive additions.

The advisory role addresses this stage, ensuring that exterior furnishings are considered with the same discipline afforded to architecture and landscape.

Each commission begins with close study of the architecture, the landscape framework and the intended patterns of use. Exterior areas are evaluated individually — terraces, courtyards, roof gardens, pool surrounds, arrival sequences — and as part of a larger composition.

Engagements typically include:

— On-site assessment and architectural review
— Development of furnishing typologies by area
— Placement strategy aligned with axes and views
— Evaluation of material durability and environmental exposure
— Independent specification across manufacturers
— Coordination through procurement and installation

The practice works collaboratively with appointed design teams or directly with private clients. The objective is coherence, proportion and long-term performance.