Controlled ecosystems.
Limited living objects.

STRUCTURE FIRST, NATURE FOLLOWS. NOTHING HERE IS ACCIDENTAL.
Glass terrarium containing a small tree with exposed roots, moss, and plants including fittonia inside a sealed dome

DEGE 01 - Sita

Roots are exposed. Humidity is trapped. Growth is regulated by the boundaries of glass and stone.

Concrete lamp with exposed structure, warm glowing filament tubes, and moss growing in cracks

DEGE 02 - Esmer

A solid concrete body is cut open, exposing its internal void. Light occupies the incision.

Textured concrete object with layered architectural forms or greebling and moss emerging from cracks

DEGE 03 - Greeble

Cast in concrete, the surface reads as an over-articulated ruin. Cracks interrupt the geometry.

Concrete surface with DEGE logo embossed and moss growing in cracks
Industrial: Concrete, rebar, sand...
Natural: Moss, flowers, plants...
Human: No contact after creation...
If you dare.

Ecobrutalism. The philosophy behing DEGE.

DEGE treats nature as a system, not an ornament.

Concrete, glass, and structure are used to contain, not soften, allowing growth to emerge through constraint and material honesty.

Each object is designed as a controlled ecosystem,
where change, adaptation, and time are part of the form.
Nothing is added for decoration or comfort.

Design remains open, evolving long after completion.

Have a brutal(istic) idea of your own?

Send a message to discuss your comission

image
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.