Perhaps it is not only about enclosing functions, but about establishing relationships. To inhabit might be, in a way, to engage in a silent dialogue with space: volumes speaking through their presence, their limits, their textures, while the inhabitant responds through movement, perception, and use.
This interplay generates a clear spatial order, sustained by a palette that balances neutrality and expression. Calm surfaces set the background, while more intense textures punctuate the scene, turning everyday elements into presences that resonate within the whole.