Small & beautiful
May 7, 2020
Mini Flat Moscow: an apartment of only 32 square meters in which Thonet furnishings find the ideal context of harmony and light.

In just 33 square meters the architectural firm Bazi has created a fully furnished apartment in the center of Moscow. Each square meter has been expertly designed and exploited: natural light illuminates an environment furnished with refinement and discretion.
In the comfortable reading corner there is a generous shelf for books and an example of the club armchair S 35 designed by Marcel Breuer positioned so as to admire the splendid panorama of the city.
In the famous S 35 model, the designer had managed to condense all the functions of a cantilever armchair into a single continuous tubular steel line. In this way the flexible effect of the cantilever model was, and still is, doubled since the armrests, flexing independently of the seat, counterbalance the oscillation of the seat and backrest structure projected backwards. For the upholstery, the Russian architects chose full grain black leather.
In the small apartment the two side tables of the B 97 series are also used: in the living room the one with black painted frame and natural wooden shelf, in the bedroom the classic version used as a bedside table.
The team of architects then opted for the black version of the Kuula table lamp by Uli Budde: its formal elegance makes it perfect as a reading lamp combined with the B 97 table in the bedroom.
www.thonet.de
SHARE THIS
Contribute
G&G _ Magazine is always looking for the creative talents of stylists, designers, photographers and writers from around the globe.
Find us on
Latest News

As global demand for halal products reaches unprecedented levels, the highly anticipated MEGA HALAL Bangkok, alongside with the concurrent MEGA SHOW Bangkok, this July establishes Thailand as the definitive trade capital of ASEAN, providing a truly international sourcing and networking marketplace for the global halal industry.

Building on What's Already There As this year's LIV Hospitality Design Awards winners settle into the wider conversation, certain patterns become difficult to ignore. Properties built for warm-climate escape recur across the list. Sustainability surfaces less as a stated goal than as a working method. And several of the strongest projects are renovations rather than new builds. Read together, the winners point toward where hospitality design is heading as the year continues. Designed for the Season Several of this year's winners speak directly to the season ahead. Kona Village , on Hawaii's Big Island, reimagines an 81-acre resort around the history of Kaupulehu, led by Greg Warner and Mike McCabe of Walker Warner. The rebuilt property includes 150 traditional guest hale, a new spa, and five restaurants and bars—two of which carry over from the original resort. Rather than a wholesale reinvention, the project reads as a continuation: a property rebuilt around what made the original site significant in the first place.

One Desk designed the interiors of a house in Hornówek, near Warsaw, for a couple working in the film and television industry, together with their four-legged family members. The project reflects a cinematic sensibility translated into residential design, combining functional elegance, warm atmospheres, and bespoke details that respond to the creative lifestyle of its inhabitants.

On Norway’s western coastline, where fjords, trade routes, and ancestral narratives have shaped generations, GCR Design AS / Gunvor C Røkholt approaches interior architecture as cultural stewardship. Recognized by Luxury Lifestyle Awards with the title of Best Contemporary Residential Interior Design in Norway for Project KYN , the studio’s work reflects a disciplined commitment to preserving heritage through active, contemporary use.
Subscribe
Keep up to date with the latest trends!
Popular Posts

Building on What's Already There As this year's LIV Hospitality Design Awards winners settle into the wider conversation, certain patterns become difficult to ignore. Properties built for warm-climate escape recur across the list. Sustainability surfaces less as a stated goal than as a working method. And several of the strongest projects are renovations rather than new builds. Read together, the winners point toward where hospitality design is heading as the year continues. Designed for the Season Several of this year's winners speak directly to the season ahead. Kona Village , on Hawaii's Big Island, reimagines an 81-acre resort around the history of Kaupulehu, led by Greg Warner and Mike McCabe of Walker Warner. The rebuilt property includes 150 traditional guest hale, a new spa, and five restaurants and bars—two of which carry over from the original resort. Rather than a wholesale reinvention, the project reads as a continuation: a property rebuilt around what made the original site significant in the first place.

At M&O September 2025 edition, countless brands and design talents unveiled extraordinary innovations. Yet, among the many remarkable presences, some stood out in a truly distinctive way. G&G _ Magazine is proud to present a curated selection of 21 Outstanding Professionals who are redefining the meaning of Craftsmanship in their own unique manner, blending tradition with contemporary visions and eco-conscious approaches.












