On the outskirts of Nicosia, Cyprus, at the edge of a sparse forest, Studio Kyriakos Miltiadou has created a house that overturns the conventions of residential design open to the landscape, instead probing the idea of an inscrutable, introverted, and almost “bare-bones” living box. Deliberately adopting an ambiguous stance, the building stands out in its surroundings with the unusual presence of a sculpture or an unidentified container: the more massive and impenetrable it appears from the outside, the more it disintegrates inside into a complex interplay of fragmentations and volumetric erosions with a vaguely deconstructivist feel, articulating a living space that is protective yet richly layered and immersive.
This house in Cyprus is a carved concrete sculpture
Studio Kyriakos Miltiadou has designed a home as a box within a box, deconstructed from the inside out, shaped by an introverted yet layered and lived-in residential concept.
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- Chiara Testoni
- 06 December 2025
- Nicosia, Cyprus
- Studio Kyriakos Miltiadou
- 190 sqm
- residential
- 2025
The more massive and impenetrable the house appears on the outside, the more it disintegrates on the inside into a complex articulation of fragmentations and volumetric erosions of a vaguely deconstructivist feel
A three-dimensional grid of beams and pillars structures and punctuates the house, supporting a monolithic exposed-concrete shell measuring 14 by 17 meters, interrupted only by gaps that break the continuity of the façades and selectively frame the landscape. Like a set of Chinese boxes, the outer shell contains a second cubic volume that houses the domestic spaces and, as if driven by a process of self-erosion, breaks apart into a complex aggregation of prismatic forms, establishing a tight dialectic between the building’s solid masses and the voids of passageways and planted courtyards.
Here is an optimized, clearer, and more fluid versioOn the eastern side, a vertical slit in the wall dramatizes the “ceremonial” transition from exterior to interior, leading to an open-air garden that becomes the hub around which the rituals of daily life unfold across different levels: the common areas (kitchen, dining room, and living room) on the ground floor, and the sleeping quarters on the two upper levels. At the top, a panoramic terrace reached by an external staircase dissolves the blue-painted roof into the sky. The slender, essential rooms—radiant with light that reverberates across the pale, tactile surfaces and sparsely furnished—clearly reveal the construction hierarchy, embracing a seamless interpenetration of architecture and structure, form and function. Over time, as the climbing vegetation fills the courtyards and passageways, it will envelop the house like a “third box,” gradually softening its formal rigor.
- Domus Aer
- Kyriakos Miltiadou Studio
- Maria Tsoupani, Kyriakos Miltiadou
Photo Maria Efthymiou (Creative Photo Room)
Photo Maria Efthymiou (Creative Photo Room)
Photo Maria Efthymiou (Creative Photo Room)
Photo Maria Efthymiou (Creative Photo Room)
Photo Maria Efthymiou (Creative Photo Room)
Photo Maria Efthymiou (Creative Photo Room)
Photo Maria Efthymiou (Creative Photo Room)
Photo Maria Efthymiou (Creative Photo Room)
Photo Maria Efthymiou (Creative Photo Room)
Photo Maria Efthymiou (Creative Photo Room)
Photo Maria Efthymiou (Creative Photo Room)
Photo Maria Efthymiou (Creative Photo Room)
Photo Maria Efthymiou (Creative Photo Room)
model
ground floor plan
first floor plan
sezione B-B
section C-C