Calibrated Rawness: Studio 1:1 and the Discipline of Making in Hong Kong and Beyond
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Calibrated Rawness: Studio 1:1 and the Discipline of Making in Hong Kong and Beyond
"Calibrated rawness describes an architecture that retains the directness of matter and materiality-concrete, metal, blockwork, exposed structure, visible services-while subjecting it to rigorous control. The "raw" is not a costume, and the "refined" is not polished; it is a discipline of precise execution, producing spaces that feel balanced and considered, yet never "made up" or overworked."
"In Hong Kong, where interiors and small buildings are routinely caught between two extremes-high-gloss "luxury" finishes on one end, and budget-cautious industrial roughness on the other-a third attitude has emerged through the calibration of both: a uniquely precise, relevant, and materially honest execution that is not dependent on price point."
Hong Kong's architectural landscape typically oscillates between high-gloss luxury finishes and budget-conscious industrial aesthetics. A third approach has emerged called calibrated rawness, which maintains the directness of raw materials—concrete, metal, blockwork, exposed structure, and visible services—while subjecting them to meticulous control. This method produces spaces that feel balanced and considered without appearing overworked or artificially refined. The raw materials serve as authentic expression rather than stylistic costume, while refinement comes through disciplined execution rather than polishing. Studio 1:1 exemplifies this architectural attitude consistently, presenting it not merely as an aesthetic choice but as a repeatable, methodological approach to design.
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