Publicado 2 de April de 2026
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From Garden to Pool: When the Outdoors Becomes One Unified Space

For years, outdoor design was approached as a collection of independent elements: the terrace, the garden, the pool. However, contemporary architecture has shifted that perspective. Today, the most compelling outdoor projects are not understood in parts, but as a continuous whole where boundaries dissolve and space flows seamlessly.

In this new approach, flooring plays a fundamental role. It is no longer just a finish, but the element that connects all areas and builds a coherent visual narrative. Using the same material from indoors to outdoors, and from the living area to the pool’s edge, creates a sense of continuity that expands the space and makes it more harmonious.

The effect is immediate: the eye doesn’t stop—there are no breaks or abrupt transitions. Everything becomes part of the same language. The pool is no longer perceived as an isolated feature, but instead integrates naturally into the overall design, almost like an extension of the flooring that, at a certain point, transforms into water.

Large-format surfaces reinforce this idea. By reducing the number of joints, spaces feel cleaner and visually more expansive. The result is a calmer, more architectural aesthetic, where the material complements rather than dominates. This type of solution works especially well in projects with clean lines, where every decision aims to simplify and organize the space.

But continuity is not only aesthetic—it is also technical. Maintaining the same language across areas as different as a terrace, a garden, or the interior of a pool requires materials capable of adapting to varying conditions. This is where ceramics—especially porcelain—allow the project to be resolved coherently, offering specific performance without sacrificing visual unity.

Color also contributes to this integration. Neutral tones inspired by stone, sand, or concrete help connect architecture with its surroundings and reinforce the sense of calm that defines well-designed spaces. These are surfaces that don’t seek to stand out on their own, but to build an atmosphere.

In this type of approach, the outdoors is no longer a set of separate zones, but a single space—more livable, more flexible, and more connected to the architecture. A way of understanding design where everything fits effortlessly, and where continuity is not just an aesthetic choice, but the foundation of the project.

Discover TAU’s collections designed to bring this sense of continuity to life: Outdoor