At Milan Design Week 2026, HMA Living brought together Turri and Killa Design to unveil LŪNA, a collaboration that moves beyond furniture into something more spatial, almost atmospheric. Marking Turri’s centenary, the project looks forward rather than back, opening a dialogue between craftsmanship, architecture, and regional identity.
Inspired by the phases of the moon, LŪNA is built around a quiet but precise idea: form can remain constant while perception continuously shifts. Light, shadow, and movement become active elements in the design, shaping how the piece is experienced rather than simply observed.
The modular sofa can be composed of two, three, four or more seaters, accompanied by an armchair and a series of pebble-like side tables. Its continuous, flowing silhouette carries an architectural clarity, yet avoids rigidity. Instead, it balances opposites, structure and softness, strength and comfort, creating a form that feels both grounded and fluid. Each curve is deliberate, designed not just to support the body but to hold space.
This approach reflects Killa Design’s broader philosophy, where objects are conceived as environments rather than isolated pieces. The result is a composition that invites interaction, encouraging gathering, conversation, and movement within it. It does not dictate how it should be used, but adapts to how it is inhabited.
Turri’s contribution lies in its material mastery. Known for its precision and heritage, the Italian house brings a level of artisanal detailing that anchors the project. Surfaces are refined, tactile, and controlled, reinforcing the idea of permanence within an otherwise shifting visual experience.
HMA Living’s role extends far beyond facilitation. As the originator of the collaboration, HMA actively shaped the dialogue between Killa Design and Turri, identifying the shared language between architectural thinking and Italian craftsmanship. Acting as both curator and cultural mediator, HMA guided the project from concept to execution, ensuring that it was not only visually cohesive but contextually relevant. Their involvement brought a distinct perspective rooted in the Middle East, translating regional ways of living, gathering, and occupying space into the design itself. In this sense, LŪNA is not simply a collaboration supported by HMA Living, but one orchestrated through its vision, where global design expertise is reframed through a regional lens.
First presented in Milan, LŪNA continues its trajectory in Dubai, where it will be officially launched at HMA Living’s Jumeirah showroom. The move feels intentional. If Milan represents heritage and global design discourse, Dubai becomes the site of application, where the piece enters everyday life.
In LŪNA, nothing is static. The form remains, but the experience shifts, through light, through movement, through presence. It is not just something to sit on, but something to move around, to live with, and to see differently each time.





