Home Trends Gallotti&Radice Reimagines Living Spaces at Salone and Redefines the Feel-Good Factor at Home

Gallotti&Radice Reimagines Living Spaces at Salone and Redefines the Feel-Good Factor at Home

by creativehomex

At this year’s Salone del Mobile.Milano, Gallotti&Radice’s 2025 booth took the form of a full-scale residence, complete with a living room, dining area, lounge, bedroom, social zones and a private area, showcasing how atmosphere and the subtle ways materials and space can shape how we feel within a home.

Gallotti&Radice Booth at Salone del Mobile 2025

One of the key takeaways from the installation was the way materials were treated not just as surfaces, but as communicators. Take the contrasts: brushed aluminium against soft fabrics, glass beside raw stone, cool tones warmed by wood grain. These aren’t arbitrary pairings—they’re deliberate dialogues.

Another theme running through the space was the tension—and balance—between heritage and contemporary design thinking. Pieces like the Arch coffee table by david/nicolas, made of recycled aluminium, suggest a future-facing approach. But others, like the Sagi jacquard fabric, anchored in 1980s pattern references, show a willingness to revisit and reframe the past. There’s also the Pleiadi wall coverings by Studiopepe, produced from cotton linters—choices that reflect a quieter, more embedded approach to sustainability.

Selce Console

Mirage

Apart from these, the brand’s updated collection is expansive, but here are a few other pieces that stood out:
🔹Selce Console and Mirage coffee tables by Studiopepe show how form can be both sculptural and understated.
🔹Evolis and Evolis Next sofas by Massimo and Martina Castagna prioritise modularity without sacrificing visual lightness.
🔹The Saki chairs by Oscar and Gabriele Buratti lean into a new kind of softness—one that doesn’t feel decorative, but grounding.

Saki

Evolis, Arch

And it’s not just about individual pieces. The presentation also reflected the power of long-term creative partnerships. Familiar names like Studiopepe, Dainelli Studio, and Carlo Colombo return, alongside newer collaborators like Tollgard + Castellani and Draga & Aurel. The result is a unified but diverse body of work—another reflection of the “total living” concept Gallotti&Radice continues to explore.


www.gallottiradice.it/en-us

Images & info: Gallotti&Radice
Article by: Lily Wong

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