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Filippo Andrighetto — material study
Architect & Designer

Filippo Andrighetto.

Copenhagen / Treviso

Editions

Filippo Andrighetto is an Italian architect and designer working between Copenhagen and Treviso. His practice spans architecture, interiors and furniture, moving between the clarity and purposefulness of the Italian architectural tradition and a Scandinavian sensitivity to restraint, construction logic, and material honesty.

Andrighetto holds a double degree in Architecture from Iuav University of Venice and the University of Buenos Aires, along with a more recent postgraduate degree in digital architecture from Iuav. He relocated to Copenhagen in 2022 and now works between Denmark and Italy.

The studio's design language is often framed through the idea of soft futurism: an ongoing research between heritage craftsmanship and forward-looking forms, between raw materials such as metal or stone and warmer elements like wood and natural fabrics. He is currently involved in architectural projects and renovations in Italy and Sweden, while also working on collectible and commercial design, as well as collaborations with furniture companies. Most recently, during Milan Design Week, he launched a series of chairs for the Spanish brand Marlot Baus at Alcova.

For Project Materia, Andrighetto brings a materially precise, architecture-led voice to the cohort. His contribution sits within a broader practice shaped by construction logic, atmosphere, digital design awareness and contemporary Copenhagen design culture.

Materia × Mater · 2026

Works for Materia 2026

Image revealed at launch

Space Invader

Matek™ panels

A side table that translates 8-bit pixel language into sculptural furniture.

Space Invader is a side table conceived as an object that occupies and invades the space around it. It is inspired by the iconic 1978 video game created by Tomohiro Nishikado, translating its pixelated visual language into a sculptural piece of furniture.

The table also recalls the mosaic interventions of the artist Invader, echoing the low-resolution aesthetic of his urban installations. Composed of alternating Matek panels, the object generates a layered and blocky geometry, where solid matter dissolves into a dynamic composition of voids and surfaces.