LIT STUDIO’s Sidra Turns Murano Glass into Structural Module
During Milan Design Week 2026, LIT STUDIO—the duo of Rudy Faissal and Riccardo Boccia—unveils Sidra: A Modular Grammar, a system built around a single blown-glass module from Murano. The module becomes a unit of measure for configurations that expand without losing coherence. The bookshelf, side table, and lamp are variations of the same principle, evoking organic branching (Sidra means lotus, symbol of growth). Murano glass, traditionally decorative, is used as structural element, while honeycomb aluminum—usually hidden—remains visible. This reflects a fascination with the unfinished and controlled error as authentic creative space. The bookshelf uses yellow glass modules and aluminum shelves; the side table combines satin pink glass with a stone top; the lamp integrates light into the structure. Transparency builds rhythm and modulates perception. The minimal installation lets the project’s logic emerge, rejecting the idea of a definitive form. Sidra reinforces LIT STUDIO’s vision of design as an open field where modularity becomes spatial strategy.
Key facts
- LIT STUDIO presents Sidra: A Modular Grammar at Milan Design Week 2026.
- The system is based on a single blown-glass module from Murano.
- The module serves as a unit of measure for expandable configurations.
- Products include a bookshelf, side table, and lamp as variations of the same principle.
- Murano glass is used structurally, not decoratively.
- Honeycomb aluminum is left visible, usually hidden.
- The bookshelf features yellow glass modules and aluminum shelves.
- The side table combines satin pink glass with a stone top.
- The lamp integrates light into the structure.
- The name Sidra references the lotus, symbolizing growth and continuity.
- The installation is minimal to highlight the project's logic.
- The design rejects definitive form in favor of continuous evolution.
Entities
Artists
- Rudy Faissal
- Riccardo Boccia
Institutions
- LIT STUDIO
Locations
- Milan
- Italy
- Murano