RSCC_STUDIO

Welcome to the RSCC_STUDIO page, a place where we bring people into contact with concept and design. At RSCC, we bring ideas and concepts to life so people can be inspired by them. In this way, we aim to influence the architecture and design community through the RSCC way of thinking. So, have a look around and get inspired to design!

                                                        RECENT WORK

MOUNTAIN SIDE TINY HOUSE

In the design of this tiny house, great attention has been paid to the relationship between the dwelling and its natural surroundings. Key elements such as sustainability, animal welfare, and views play a central role.

The roof of the house is covered with a green mat of flowers and plants, enhancing biodiversity: insects and animals find food and shelter here, while the house simultaneously gives something back to its environment. Beneath the house, space is created where animals can take refuge during severe weather conditions in the mountains.

THE REFLECTION ROOM

A space ideal for me, in this space everything is surrounded by important elements for a good conversation, namely: coffee, whiskey, snacks and a mirror to look at myself. I designed the space according to a characteristic of myself, because when I talk to people I can not resist looking at myself in the reflection of something. One calls it annoying and the other says that I am much vain. I have tried to pay attention to it or to unlearn it myself but it seemed more convenient to design this space.

CHAOS IN THE STRUCTURE

A painting by RSCC.

THE BODY BAG CHAIR

In this concept, the boundary between body and object begins to blur. What at first seems to be an ordinary chair turns out to be filled with lifelike organs, visible through the transparent plastic. The familiar image of a comfortable seat is thus transformed into something both fascinating and unsettling.

The chair, normally a place of rest and relaxation, seems here to breathe and live. The organs beneath the glossy surface evoke fragility and mortality, reminding us that
behind every form of comfort there is always something bodily.

This chair invites us to reflect on our relationship with the body and with the objects that surround us. It plays with feelings of wonder, showing how design and humanity can merge in unexpected ways.