INTERIOR THRESHOLD / House in Rome

This project reimagines the domestic interior as a field of thresholds rather than a sequence of rooms. A single infrastructural element—the stair—acts as the spatial fulcrum, connecting levels, times of day, and different ways of inhabiting.

The stair is not a passage but a place. Its landing becomes a small platform where movements cross, voices linger, and views unfold toward the city. Around it, walls loosen and programs overlap, creating an interior that is porous, mutable, and quietly theatrical.

Light filters through vertical cuts, following the stair’s geometry and marking the passing of time. The project treats the domestic space as an infrastructural landscape, where intimacy and circulation, stillness and movement, fold into one another.