
Full stack / east cut
Shows how the entertaining rooms, sleeping quarters and rooftop retreat sit vertically across the residence.
A dedicated visual read of Penthouse 301 — from the lower living floor to the rooftop suite — using exploded views, annotated plans and perspective studies to show how the apartment actually lives.

These two axonometric views reveal the whole property at once, making the stair progression and the relationship between entertaining, sleeping and rooftop living immediately legible.

Shows how the entertaining rooms, sleeping quarters and rooftop retreat sit vertically across the residence.

A second angle that clarifies circulation between levels and the balance between private rooms and gathering spaces.
Annotated plan renders make it easier to understand room use, sleeping flexibility and the way the upper floor transforms between retreat mode and extra guest capacity.

Arrival, kitchen, piano lounge and a flexible sleeping setup gathered around the main living volume.

The upper floor arranged as a private retreat with balcony seating, breakout lounge and a tucked-away bedroom suite.

Shows how the rooftop level flexes from lounge use into additional overnight capacity without losing circulation.
These perspective renders complement the plan views with a more spatial reading of the apartment — how seating, dining, sleeping and balcony life are staged across different use modes.

A social setup that highlights long-table dining, lounge seating and the open feel of the main entertaining floor.

Captures the indoor-outdoor relationship between the lounge zone, balcony edge and the quieter suite beyond.

A calmer furniture plan showing how the top floor can read as a relaxed hideaway above the city.

Documents the adaptable nature of the upper floor when it shifts from entertaining to guest accommodation.
The stacked views clarify how the home moves from arrival floor to private rooms to rooftop level.
The upper floor is shown in both lounge and sleep modes so capacity feels concrete, not abstract.
Perspective and plan views work together so visitors can judge space, privacy and hosting potential at a glance.
We show the building by appointment — in person or by video call. Pick a morning and we'll put the coffee on.