Venetian Island I, Miami Beach
Togu Miami: Design vision & Interior design
3Design architecture: Architect of Record
7200 SF - 670 m2
Architecture of Light, Rhythm and Landscape
The island, open to the bay on three sides. That condition determined everything: the orientation, the section, the way the roof folds.
The Z-shaped roof is the project. It organizes the volumes below, controls the Miami light, which is always too strong or too flat, and gives the house a calm, singular profile against the bay. Beneath it, the plan is a sequence of rooms that open and compress in turn. Some face the bay through full-height glass. Others pull inward, lower, quieter, lined in bleached oak and soft stone.

The material palette was kept deliberately narrow. Oak, stone, matte black steel at the joints. The built-in furniture follows the same logic. Nothing was added after the fact. The bar, the storage walls, the bedroom headboards are all extensions of the same spatial idea.
​
A glass elevator and a floating stair lead to the rooftop. Up there, the city and the water sit at the same level, which is the best thing about this house: the feeling that you are exactly between two worlds, not belonging entirely to either.
​
The garden and pool terrace are laid in Ipe wood, dense and dark, which will silver over time. The planting is thick enough to absorb the neighbors. The infinity edge runs to the property line and stops. Beyond it, the bay.























