Project
Bruma
Nadine Lucca
Apr 2, 2025

Weightless geometry, grounded emotion.
Bruma is a spatial meditation on softness and subtraction. Designed as a weekend retreat nestled in a wooded clearing, the project explores the interplay between foggy light, quiet materials, and simplified geometry. The structure is reduced to its essentials — planes, voids, and thresholds — allowing nature to do most of the talking. Our goal was to render not just the architecture, but the atmosphere it invites.

The visual strategy centered around mood: early-morning stillness, filtered light through trees, and interiors that feel almost untouched. Color grading was restrained, leaning into washed neutrals and soft contrasts. The furnishings are minimal but tactile — linen, clay, pale wood — creating subtle textures that break the silence without disturbing it.

Technically, Bruma required a delicate rendering pipeline. Volumetric lighting and shallow depth of field were used to simulate the sensation of being inside a cloud — present, but partially hidden. Post-production was used only to enhance the light’s path and preserve the subtle tension between inside and out.

Designed by Nadine Lucca, Bruma is more than a dwelling — it’s a pause. A reminder that architecture can disappear a little, in order to let emotion take the lead.
Contact
Reach Out. We’re Listening
Whether you’re ready to start or just exploring ideas, send us a message.
We’ll get back to you soon.
Designed and Developed by Cisco Larios
All Rights Reserved.
Made in Framer
Project
Bruma
Nadine Lucca
Apr 2, 2025

Weightless geometry, grounded emotion.
Bruma is a spatial meditation on softness and subtraction. Designed as a weekend retreat nestled in a wooded clearing, the project explores the interplay between foggy light, quiet materials, and simplified geometry. The structure is reduced to its essentials — planes, voids, and thresholds — allowing nature to do most of the talking. Our goal was to render not just the architecture, but the atmosphere it invites.

The visual strategy centered around mood: early-morning stillness, filtered light through trees, and interiors that feel almost untouched. Color grading was restrained, leaning into washed neutrals and soft contrasts. The furnishings are minimal but tactile — linen, clay, pale wood — creating subtle textures that break the silence without disturbing it.

Technically, Bruma required a delicate rendering pipeline. Volumetric lighting and shallow depth of field were used to simulate the sensation of being inside a cloud — present, but partially hidden. Post-production was used only to enhance the light’s path and preserve the subtle tension between inside and out.

Designed by Nadine Lucca, Bruma is more than a dwelling — it’s a pause. A reminder that architecture can disappear a little, in order to let emotion take the lead.
Contact
Reach Out. We’re Listening
Whether you’re ready to start or just exploring ideas, send us a message.
We’ll get back to you soon.
Designed and Developed by Cisco Larios
2025. All Rights Reserved
Made in Framer
Project
Bruma
Nadine Lucca
Apr 2, 2025

Weightless geometry, grounded emotion.
Bruma is a spatial meditation on softness and subtraction. Designed as a weekend retreat nestled in a wooded clearing, the project explores the interplay between foggy light, quiet materials, and simplified geometry. The structure is reduced to its essentials — planes, voids, and thresholds — allowing nature to do most of the talking. Our goal was to render not just the architecture, but the atmosphere it invites.

The visual strategy centered around mood: early-morning stillness, filtered light through trees, and interiors that feel almost untouched. Color grading was restrained, leaning into washed neutrals and soft contrasts. The furnishings are minimal but tactile — linen, clay, pale wood — creating subtle textures that break the silence without disturbing it.

Technically, Bruma required a delicate rendering pipeline. Volumetric lighting and shallow depth of field were used to simulate the sensation of being inside a cloud — present, but partially hidden. Post-production was used only to enhance the light’s path and preserve the subtle tension between inside and out.

Designed by Nadine Lucca, Bruma is more than a dwelling — it’s a pause. A reminder that architecture can disappear a little, in order to let emotion take the lead.
Contact
Reach Out. We’re Listening
Whether you’re ready to start or just exploring ideas, send us a message.
We’ll get back to you soon.
Designed and Developed by Cisco Larios
All Rights Reserved.
Made in Framer