One Thousand Museum

Setting

In Miami, One Thousand Museum sets a rare tone for residential living. The tower is known for its bold vertical architecture, designed by Zaha Hadid and recently completed by Studio Zaha Hadid Architects. It’s a building that doesn’t blend in, and it doesn’t need to.

The project sits in a city that moves fast, but this address asks for a different pace. Not quieter, just more considered. The kind of place where materials, proportions, and light matter from the moment the door closes.

The Apartment

High above the city, a large apartment on the 38th floor becomes the stage for an interior defined by calm choices. The elevation changes everything. The view, the perspective, the sense of separation from the street. And the space needs furnishings that can hold their own without competing with the architecture.

This is where the brief becomes clear. The apartment isn’t treated as a showroom, and it isn’t pushed into a single look. It’s a lived-in setting, but finished to a level that feels intentional. Every piece has to earn its place.

Meridiani at One Thousand Museum

Meridiani was selected to furnish the apartment, bringing its refined collections into a new, exclusive context. The brand’s Italian approach feels at home here: composed, detailed, and never loud. The result is an interior that supports the building’s strong identity, rather than trying to soften it.

There’s a natural dialogue between the apartment and the furniture. The architecture carries presence. Meridiani brings balance. And when the balance is right, the room doesn’t feel “designed” in a forced way. It simply feels finished.

Architecture First

One Thousand Museum is a signature work, and the interior respects that. Nothing is asked to outshine the structure. Instead, the furnishing choices take on a quieter role, letting the lines and engineering of the tower remain the lead. But quiet doesn’t mean plain. It means edited.

Set within this Miami landmark, Meridiani’s presence is confident and controlled. The project shows how a strong architectural envelope can be complemented by furniture that understands restraint, scale, and the value of a clean, resolved atmosphere.