In the heart of Paris emerges Atelier HA, the studio founded by Hugo Vince and Adèle Nourry. As they recount, “it was at the École Camondo that the idea of creating our own studio first came to us, to be free to realize our own ideas. We wanted to give free rein to our creativity.” Their work unfolds as a manifesto of color, reflection, and memory, where each project becomes a stage for life and emotion.
An architect by training and an tireless explorer of perception, Hugo Vince plays with light and mirrors like a stage director orchestrating the gaze. His interiors multiply reflections, expand spaces, and transform the everyday into something unexpected. In contrast to this experimental vision, Adèle Nourry brings the warmth of sensitivity and the rigor of the tangible: her hand is evident in the choice of materials, in the cadence of colors, in the balance between the bold and the intimate. Together they have built a creative complicity where every gesture is guided by the search for livable and surprising atmospheres.
The studio is distinguished by its ability to engage in dialogue with the memory of spaces: from compact Parisian apartments to family houses on the outskirts, Atelier HA preserves traces of the past while reinventing them with contemporary theatricality. Their interiors—painted with glossy lacquers, mirrors that double reality, tiles that recall craftsmanship, and vintage pieces steeped in history—are settings that celebrate both intimacy and conviviality.
Beyond technique, the studio advocates for an empathetic practice, able to listen to those who inhabit their projects and translate their desires into spaces that are both habitable and poetic. In this way, Vince and Nourry affirm that architecture and interior design, in passionate hands, are a form of art that vibrates in the present while never forgetting the memory of place.