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Spalvieri & Del Ciotto Design Stilo for Scavolini, a Whole-Home System Built Around Continuity and Contemporary Living

  • Writer: Style Essentials Edit Team
    Style Essentials Edit Team
  • 9 hours ago
  • 2 min read
Scavolini's new Stilo system

Scavolini's new Stilo system, designed by Spalvieri & Del Ciotto, arrives as a whole-home proposition that moves from kitchen to living area to bathroom within a single coherent design language, built around the understanding that the contemporary home no longer organizes itself around fixed, single-purpose rooms but around spaces that shift function across the day and need furnishings that can move with them.



Scavolini's new Stilo system


The kitchen sits at the center of the Stilo proposal and is treated as the social and architectural heart of the home rather than a purely functional zone, with large sculptural islands as the defining element, each featuring a sliding covering top that conceals the cooking and washing areas when closed, turning the worksurface into something closer to a considered piece of furniture than a kitchen fixture. Wall-mounted units, storage cabinets, display cases, and open elements extend outward from that central island, with a material and finish selection that expands the system's modularity and makes it deeply customizable across different spatial configurations and personal aesthetics.




The unifying thread running through every element of Stilo, across every room and every function, is the cylinder, a pure geometric form that Spalvieri & Del Ciotto have deployed horizontally and vertically throughout the design as handles, shelves, desks, lighting bars, and equipped rails for organizing utensils, giving the system a signature detail that is simultaneously functional and decorative and immediately recognizable whether it appears in the kitchen, the living area, or the bathroom. Available in black and titanium finishes, the cylinder reads differently in each: bolder and more sophisticated in black, brighter and more balanced in titanium, giving specifiers and homeowners a meaningful choice that shifts the character of a space without changing its fundamental design logic.

Taken as a whole, Stilo makes the case that compositional continuity across the entire home is not a stylistic luxury but a functional one and that a system rigorous enough in its design language to hold together across kitchen, living, bathroom, and home office gives contemporary living the coherent framework it has increasingly been looking for.


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