For over two decades, the studio designed award-winning private homes shaped by precision, craft, and a deep understanding of how people live.

That experience now informs a broader mandate: the development of housing as a repeatable architectural product.

Kitchen with yellow lower cabinets, open wooden upper cabinets, hanging pots and pans, checkerboard floor, and a brick wall on the right.

Instrument for Living brings together architecture, interiors, and product thinking to create small-scale urban housing with uncommon clarity and quality.

Home05 is a five-unit residential model designed for established neighbourhoods—compact in footprint, but ambitious in design, performance, and livability.

Two unfinished wooden block models on a white table, with a potted plant and blurred bookshelf and red brick model in the background.

The opportunity is not a single building, but a system.

Through repeatable design, integrated delivery, and long-term ownership thinking, the model is intended to scale across multiple sites, bringing design-led housing to the city with consistency, efficiency, and lasting value.

A modern red brick building with multiple large windows, surrounded by trees with autumn foliage, on a quiet street with a parked car and two people talking.