From Muuto’s softly lived-in Brera apartment to Artemest’s palazzo-scale grandeur and Studiopepe’s introspective project apartment, these Milan Design Week interiors use the home as a stage for design, feeling and identity.
April 22nd, 2026
At Milan Design Week, the most memorable interiors are often the ones that feel momentarily inhabitable. Not just a room with product in it, but a more complete domestic proposition — a place with mood, logic and a point of view about how living might unfold. This year, three apartment-style presentations stand out for exactly that reason. One is soft and relaxed, attuned to the rituals of daily life; another is lavish, atmospheric and built around the enduring pull of Italian craft and decoration; the third turns inward, treating the apartment less as a showcase than as a setting for reflection, process and creative exchange. Together, they move beyond display in the narrow sense, using the apartment as a way to stage design in relation to identity and the life that gathers around objects.

Muuto Milan Apartment: The Art of Belonging
Muuto’s Milan Apartment, installed in Brera, is framed around a simple but persuasive idea: that the home shapes how we live. Titled The Art of Belonging, the presentation has been conceived less as a pristine showcase than as a lived-in interior, where daily rituals and personal habits are allowed to remain visible. Rooms are organised around acts of domestic life — arriving, gathering, hosting, preparing, listening and winding down — and that gives the apartment a gentle sense of rhythm. Rather than chasing theatrical effect, Muuto leans into warmth and atmosphere that makes the space feel plausibly inhabited.
That same attitude carries through to the debut of the Coltre Modular Sofa by Studiopepe, which sits at the centre of the installation. Named after the Italian word for blanket, Coltre is designed as a sculptural modular system with a quilted textile layer draped over a more structured base. The parallel stitched lines give it softness and volume without losing clarity, and the piece can expand into larger configurations or stand alone in lounge-chair form. It is an apt addition to a presentation concerned with comfort as something emotional as well as physical. The apartment’s strength lies in that overall balance: it doesn’t overstate its ideas, but instead suggests that good domestic design can support everyday life without becoming overly polished or prescriptive.

L’Appartamento by Artemest
For the fourth edition of L’Appartamento by Artemest, Palazzo Donizetti once again becomes the setting for a decorative world built room by room. This year’s exhibition takes “Italian Grandeur” as its curatorial theme, bringing together a group of international studios to reinterpret the spirit of different Italian cities through a sequence of domestic interiors filled with furniture, lighting and objects made by Italian artisans. Set within the frescoed rooms and ceremonial spaces of the 19th-century palazzo, the exhibition is immersive from the outset, using the architecture itself as part of the argument rather than simply as backdrop.
Each room takes on a distinct identity. Sasha Adler’s vestibule and reading room draw on Venice, with a mood that is intimate, layered and quietly theatrical. Rockwell Group’s dining room looks to Naples and its dramatic contrasts, treating dining as both ritual and performance. MAWD’s grand salon turns to Rome, building depth through colour, materiality and a strong sense of composition, while Charlap Hyman & Herrero channel Palermo in entertainment salons that soften grandeur with a more inhabited, time-worn sensibility. Urjowan Alsharif Interiors completes the sequence with a Florentine alcove conceived as a retreat — contemplative, crafted and finely detailed. Artemest describes the whole as “a multisensory journey through Italy’s artistic capitals,” and that feels about right: the project is at its best when it lets decoration, craftsmanship and atmosphere carry cultural meaning without collapsing into nostalgia.
Related: Reframing the retail experience with HARMAY

THE INTIMACY by Studiopepe
If Muuto’s apartment is grounded in everyday ritual and Artemest’s in decorative immersion, Studiopepe’s THE INTIMACY is more inward-looking again. Conceived as the studio’s 2026 manifesto project, the installation opens at Viale Abruzzi as the first act in a newly permanent project apartment — a space intended not only for exhibition, but for workshops, talks, collaboration and ongoing creative exchange. Marking 20 years of Studiopepe, the project reflects on creativity itself, not as output or performance but as a deeply personal process. As the press text puts it: “To create is to inhabit oneself, to transform inner experience into a tangible form. The work is what remains; the process, however, is what transforms the creator.”
That idea shapes the apartment as a sequence of thresholds between impulse and form, silence and voice, matter and gesture. Set within Studiopepe’s historic apartment, with its stucco ceilings, herringbone floors and large windows, the installation uses interior design to stage a quieter kind of encounter. Furniture, art, performance, sound and scent are brought into dialogue, while photographic works by Andrea Ferrari deepen the project’s exploration of archetype, image and form. There is less emphasis here on the finished room as a resolved picture and more on the atmosphere of making — on hesitation, drift, intuition and the traces left behind. In that sense, THE INTIMACY feels like a compelling expansion of the apartment format during Milan Design Week: not just a domestic interior to move through, but a space for thinking about what creative life looks like before it settles into objects.
Muuto
muuto.com
Artemest
artemest.com
Studiopepe
studiopepe.info
Photography
Courtesy of Muuto
Manfredi Gioacchini
Andrea Ferrari




















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