Systems

Certain design questions do not end with space.
They continue into mechanisms, structures, and invention.

How these questions arise

Some begin in use.
Some in maintenance.
Some in durability, access, movement, or the quiet inefficiencies of existing systems.

Pursued far enough, such questions no longer remain details.
They begin to take the form of systems.

One such exploration is

Cubotic.

Developed as a hybrid kitchen cabinet system, Cubotic emerged from practical questions around durability, maintenance, replaceability, and the long life of the kitchen.

It considers cabinetry not as a sealed assembly, but as something that may be reached, repaired, adapted, or renewed over time.

Its structural logic remains constant, while visible and invisible frame variations allow different expressions.

Other Explorations

Not every innovation arrives as a complete system.

Some take the form of quieter improvements in storage, movement, access, or maintenance.
A wardrobe leg that allows later access below.
A shutter system that attempts to resolve persistent limitations.
Small adjustments that alter the long-term ease of living with a thing.

Product Development

Alongside completed systems, other ideas remain in development.

Some are still being tested through details, prototypes, and fabrication studies.
What connects them is a consistent interest in how things are made, used, maintained, and lived with over time.

For us, systems are not separate from design.

They are often what design becomes
when a question is followed far enough.