Magdalenka — A House That Guides the Light

  • Sliding terrace doors over 4 meters wide
  • Windows with concealed sash
  • Frameless corner joints
  • High-insulation glazing with dark, almost invisible spacer bars
  • Three-layer installation, flush with the façade
  • Precision-made thresholds and components ensuring long-term durability

This is one of those projects where every detail responds directly to the architecture. The building’s form is based on clear geometry — its center defined by a corner that doesn’t divide, but connects. Instead of standard frames, we proposed glass-to-glass corner joints — polished, seamless, silent. As a result, light doesn’t stop — it flows through the space.

 

As part of the project, we designed and installed 17 aluminium structures with a total area of over 58 m². Large panes, slim profiles, precise lines — all fitted to the millimeter, aligned with the building’s geometry. The joinery was finished in two tones: graphite on the exterior — calm, deep, and coherent with the façade; light grey inside — to preserve the rhythm of the interior. These choices weren’t meant to impress — they were meant to be right. And they were.

 

This project was built without compromise. Every detail was the result of conversations, decisions, and a shared belief that architecture can be calm — even when it is precise. Magdalenka is a house that doesn’t seek attention — it soothes it.

 

Here, light leads the space. And the space lets you breathe.

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