Architecture
Spatial planning, additions, interior architecture, thresholds, built-in elements, and complete residential concepts.
Studio
Natalie Pierce Studio designs spaces that are exact, tactile, and emotionally legible. The work is less interested in spectacle than in the quiet force of a room that understands its people.
Natalie Pierce
Natalie founded the studio after years of working between residential architecture, private interiors, and set-like spaces built for intimate narratives. Her drawings are known for their spare linework and for a strange patience: she will redraw a threshold until it feels inevitable.
Her practice is grounded in three habits. She listens closely to the way a client already lives. She tests materials in changing light before trusting them. She leaves room for the small, private details that make a space feel almost remembered.
The studio remains deliberately small. Every project passes through Natalie's hands, from first conversation to final shelf height.
The studio
The team works across homes, artist studios, reading rooms, boutique galleries, and private retreats. The studio's scale allows for close collaboration with cabinetmakers, metalworkers, plaster artisans, lighting designers, and landscape specialists.
Rather than impose a recognizable house style, Natalie builds a language for each project: what the site can hold, what the client needs, and what kind of silence the room should have.
Spatial planning, additions, interior architecture, thresholds, built-in elements, and complete residential concepts.
Furniture, finishes, lighting, art placement, textiles, kitchens, baths, libraries, studios, and lived-in rooms.
Custom palettes, sample studies, maker coordination, and tactile decisions tested under real light.
Rooms for creative work, books, exhibitions, and private collections where atmosphere carries meaning.
How it feels
Rooms often carry a restrained palette: mineral white, burnished wood, dark metal, pale paper, weathered stone. Natalie is interested in spaces that gather focus, protect conversation, and let ordinary objects become meaningful.