how penique productions dissolves architecture into glowing, immersive atmospheres

inflatable rooms to mimic dream states

Penique Productions builds environments that feel as though they have slipped out of sleep and settled, temporarily, inside existing architecture. The Barcelona-founded collective works with air, plastic, and light to remake familiar rooms into sealed, glowing interiors where scale softens and edges lose their authority. Thus, their inflatable and interactive installations sit somewhere between architecture and atmosphere.

The group turns the volume of a room into something that can be felt, pressed against, and inhabited with a heightened awareness of the body.

penique productions
Juhwangsaeg, Seoul, 2025. image courtesy Penique Productions

Inflated interiors and shifting perception

Across its transformative projects, the approach by Penique Productions remains consistent. The team inserts a thin membrane into a building which is then inflated until it meets walls, columns, and ceilings. The original structure remains present as a faint outline, visible through layers of translucent material, while the new interior establishes its own logic of pressure, color, and light.

Movement becomes slower and more deliberate. Sound is dampened, and surfaces respond softly to contact. What emerges is an environment in constant negotiation between the rigidity of architecture and the instability of air.

penique productions
MATRIA, Melbourne, 2015. image courtesy Penique Productions

Color as structure

Penique Prroductions makes use of color as a primary spatial tool. With MATRIA (see here), installed within Melbourne’s Royal Exhibition Building, a saturated pink fills the entire hall, dissolving the building’s historic detailing into a continuous field. The columns remain legible as silhouettes, yet their material weight is replaced by a diffuse glow. Visitors move through a volume that reads less as a room and more as a thickened atmosphere, where light is filtered and redistributed through the inflated skin.

penique productions
Giallo 368, Milan, 2023. image courtesy Penique Productions

A similar strategy appears in Giallo 368, where a dense orange shifts perception toward warmth and enclosure. The installation wraps seating, floors, and vertical surfaces in the same material, creating continuity between elements that would usually be distinct. The effect is physical. The air inside carries a slight pressure, the plastic holds a sheen that reflects and absorbs light unevenly, and the body registers the environment through temperature, acoustics, and proximity.

penique productions
Louis Vuitton runway, Paris, 2024. image courtesy Louis Vuitton

Penique Productions often works inside buildings with strong identities, allowing those identities to remain visible while shifting how they are experienced. For the Louis Vuitton Spring Summer 2024 runway in Paris, the collective developed an inflated environment that hovered above and around the show space, echoing the logic of a hot air balloon. The runway becomes part of a larger volume, where overhead forms gather and release light, and the audience sits within a space that feels suspended.

penique productions
Basement, New York, 2025. image courtesy Penique Productions

Temporary worlds within permanent shells

These projects rely on a precise understanding of construction and logistics. The membranes are cut, welded, and installed with attention to airflow, pressure points, and safety. Openings are controlled, and circulation is guided through seams and thresholds in the material. Despite their softness, the environments are carefully engineered, balancing fragility with resilience over the duration of their use.

What remains after each installation is dismantled is the memory of a space that moved. The buildings return to their original state, yet the experience lingers as a shift in how volume, light, and enclosure can be understood. Penique Productions works in this interval between permanence and disappearance, where architecture holds steady and the air inside it becomes active.

Similar Posts

  • Lirio 7

    Located in a quiet street in one of the most emblematic neighborhoods in Mexico City, this project is an intervention that has its roots on the understanding of the urban and social dynamics in Mexico City. Lirio 7 has an interesting history; as an Art Déco building, originally housed public baths during the 30s, then in the 50s became a sanatorium, and before its abandonment, it was the headquarters of a security company. Considering this conditions, we took advantage from an abandoned building without any recognized heritage value by local authorities, to restore it and offer a specific model of housing that recovers the historical value of Santa María La Ribera neighborhood. The design process is based on the concept of a central patio and its perimeter circulation, which was adapted into a new layout to create 12 new apartments where the main corridor becomes part of the home. In this type of buildings, this circulation is a public place and the challenge on making it private leads to define an enclosure that plays with the visuals. The dwellings are arranged around the patio, orienting their view to it, which is considered as a place of introspection, not so much as circulation. Concrete elements of different heights acts as planters, dampen the sound of the water from the recovered fountain and support the discourse of circulations, interposing themselves to the visuals, again to guide and give privacy to the user. Each of the houses therefore has ventilation and daylight entrance. The first and second floors have a greater free height, typical of the original construction moment, allowing a greater volume of use of spaces. The third level, from the 50s as well as the new structures implemented on deck, maintain a standard height more like that the required by current construction regulations. A perforated concrete prism, outstands from the patio’s façade, creating a visual contrast without stealing it protagonism. With a different materiality and density from the rest of the project, this volume patches the view from the outside, creating a light and shadows game towards the last apartment, and allows the user to enjoy the views.