photographs: Sonia Sabnani
styling: The Santa Living
building: Cerveró Obras
interior design project.

punto residence

In the heart of Valencia, Casa Punto emerges as an intimate exploration of how space can speak of calm, identity, and connection. Conceived by Sigfrido Serra Studio, this project does not seek to impress through scale or theatricality, but through its ability to convey serenity. It is a home understood more through feeling than through form—a dwelling that is not merely observed, but lived in, breathed, and listened to. Here, interior architecture merges with emotion, becoming a domestic landscape that celebrates stillness without losing vitality.

The starting point was the creation of organic volumes—a gesture that defines the spatial experience. There are no sharp angles or rigid boundaries here. The junctions between walls and ceilings soften into curves, columns fade away, and natural light flows uninterrupted, creating a continuity that feels closer to nature than to construction. Each curve is designed to accompany the movement of the body and the gaze, so that whoever inhabits the space feels the house embracing, protecting, and welcoming them.

The herringbone wooden flooring, bordered by a smooth perimeter running through the entire home, acts as a rhythmic base upon which everything unfolds. It is a floor that sounds like home, that ages beautifully, and that marks the silent passage of time. Upon this surface, a palette of creams, browns, and beige tones spreads naturally, evoking the warm, sun-dried landscapes of the Mediterranean. All materials—noble and honest—are chosen for their texture and emotional resonance rather than their shine. Linen, cotton, wood, and ceramics create a serene atmosphere where even silence becomes a design material.

As a counterpoint, the home opens up to a different kind of energy through colour. Among the neutral tones, subtle flashes of terracotta, green, and ochre emerge. These accents do not seek prominence, but rhythm—a chromatic conversation introducing a second layer of meaning: a connection with Latin America, with the vital force of Colombia, reinterpreted through a Mediterranean lens. This inspiration is not literal but emotional. It appears in the details, in textures, in the way colour vibrates on the materials. It is a way of uniting two places, two sensibilities, two ways of understanding life: Valencian warmth and Colombian exuberance, fused in a single architectural gesture.

The kitchen acts as the energetic heart of the home. Its intense terracotta tone radiates warmth and vitality. It is not merely a functional space, but a lived-in sculpture. The fluted fronts, veined marble, and carefully studied proportions create a composition that is both precise and emotional. This is where daily life concentrates: the aroma of coffee, conversation, midday light. Every detail is designed to convey presence—to ensure that beauty is not something seen, but something felt, whether through the touch of a surface or the rhythm of movement through space.

The furniture reinforces the idea of balance between restraint and expression. Contemporary pieces coexist with bespoke objects and design elements that do not seek to dominate, but to converse. Everything in Casa Punto serves wellbeing. There is no artifice or excess—only intention. Each object occupies its exact place, yet leaves room for life to happen. The house is not finished—it is alive, in constant dialogue with its inhabitants. Its beauty does not depend on perfection, but on how light touches things, on the passage of time across surfaces.

Light is perhaps the project’s great invisible protagonist. Filtered through sheer linen curtains, it glides across the surfaces, caressing wood, marble, and limewashed walls. Throughout the day, this light transforms both spaces and moods. At dawn, it is soft and golden; by midday, crisp and white; and by dusk, it adopts a warm hue that envelops the interior in an almost liquid atmosphere. More than illuminating, the light in Casa Punto accompanies. It is an emotional element that reveals the architecture without exposing it, hinting at the soul of the space.

Every detail—a curve, a texture, a shadow—forms part of a single narrative: that of a home designed to be felt. Casa Punto does not seek to dazzle, but to comfort. It is a dwelling that celebrates the essential and the sensory, where architecture ceases to be structure and becomes experience. Here, the boundaries between interior and emotion dissolve. Matter, colour, and light intertwine to tell a story about contemporary living through a deeply human gaze.

Ultimately, Casa Punto is a reflection on balance. A space where the Mediterranean meets the Latin American, where geometry converses with the curve, where serenity coexists with energy. A home that does not seek to impress, but to accompany. That does not impose, but suggests. That does not teach, but invites you to stay. Because, in the end, the true luxury of a home lies not in what it shows, but in what one feels when everything fits quietly into place.

acknowledgements: The Masie, Raúl del Chano, Arenaa Home, Los objetos decorativos, Malva Studio, Aldea, Marset, Casahari, Fulanita Justino del casar, Smeg, Bancal, Lorena Canals, Heirloom, Aldo, Victor Gonzalez, Galería Vangar, y Serra Concept.