There are designers who create beautiful interiors, and there are those who shape the way we experience space. Sig Bergamin Studio has spent decades doing both.
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Behind the Vision
“When I see Sig’s work, I feel that no one is quite like him.” Few words capture the spirit of Sig Bergamin Studio better than Gian Carlo Giammetti’s observation. Led by Sig Bergamin and Murilo Lomas, the São Paulo-based practice has become one of the most distinctive voices in contemporary design, creating interiors that are rich in culture, art, travel, and emotion.

A World Without Labels
To define Sig Bergamin Studio by a single style would be to misunderstand it entirely.
At Sig Bergamin Studio, boundaries are meant to disappear. Architecture merges with interiors, art becomes part of everyday life, and influences from different cultures, eras, and disciplines come together in unexpected harmony. The result is a body of work that resists definition, inviting each project to speak in its own voice.


No Two Stories Alike
Every project by Sig Bergamin Studio begins with a different question, and therefore arrives at a different answer. From an executive airport lounge to a surf club, from art-filled penthouses to tropical retreats, the studio demonstrates that its greatest signature is its refusal to repeat itself.

The Art of Living
Luxury Gallery Penthouse
The Luxury Gallery Penthouse is conceived almost as a private museum, where architecture becomes the backdrop for an exceptional collection of Brazilian art. Works by Alfredo Volpi, Beatriz Milhazes, Adriana Varejão, and Júlio Le Parc sit alongside eighteenth-century furniture, modernist icons, and contemporary design.


Yet the space never feels static. Each room unfolds with warmth and intimacy, where art is lived with rather than merely displayed, turning the penthouse into a continuous dialogue between culture and daily life.
Tropical Beach Home
With the Tropical Beach Home, Sig Bergamin Studio embraces a different sensibility, distilling the exuberance of tropical living into an atmosphere of effortless sophistication.

The house is less about composition than about flow—between spaces, between inside and outside, between solitude and gathering. It feels designed for movement and pause in equal measure, where the architecture quietly adapts to the rhythm of coastal life.


Warm Oasis
In the Warm Oasis, Sig Bergamin Studio transforms a central vertical void into the defining feature of the residence, where architecture becomes both structure and narrative. A sculptural staircase winds through a double-height library, turning circulation into a visual experience and drawing light through the heart of the house. Around this core, the home unfolds in layers of intimacy and openness, balancing warmth, clarity, and spatial drama.



Brazilian Country House
Far from the energy of the city, the Brazilian Country House unfolds like a love letter to rural Brazil. Stone, wood, linen, and weathered finishes celebrate the beauty of materials that improve with time, while curated art and collected objects bring quiet sophistication to every corner.


Every element seems to echo the landscape around it, creating a home where architecture and nature enhance each other in a way that feels effortlessly and unmistakably Brazilian.

Sophisticated Elegance Apartment
The Sophisticated Elegance Apartment project reveals a more restrained side of Sig Bergamin Studio, where impact is achieved through nuance rather than excess. A palette of beiges, camel, and off-white sets an editorial tone, allowing texture, proportion, and reflection to take precedence over ornament.
Across the apartment, art, furniture, and architectural elements are carefully staged in layers of contrast and control, creating a sequence of interiors where every room feels precisely composed yet quietly expressive.


A Language of Its Own
Perhaps that is the true signature of Sig Bergamin Studio. Not a colour palette, a collection, or a recognizable aesthetic, but an unwavering curiosity that allows each commission to become something entirely its own.
As Bergamin himself once said, “My style is to have no style at all.” More than a personal credo, it is the principle that has shaped the studio’s work for decades.
In the end, their greatest achievement is not creating beautiful spaces, but expanding our understanding of what architecture and design can be.

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