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Design Talk With Maria MacVeigh At Design Week Dublin
Architect and interior designer Maria MacVeigh delivered a Design Talk during Design Week Dublin, providing insights into her professional journey and design philosophy. Facilitated by architect Amanda Bone, the session began with MacVeigh recounting her upbringing in a creatively stimulating household. Her father, an architect from Belfast, and her Spanish mother, a dressmaker, instilled in her an early appreciation for creativity, design, and making. MacVeigh vividly recalled the floor plan of her childhood home and annual family trips across Europe focused on architectural and art tours, fostering her belief that building interiors offered a "world of possibilities."
After completing her interior design education, MacVeigh gained extensive international experience working in London, Barcelona, and Chile. She established MMV Design in Dublin in 2004, leveraging her diverse background in both architectural and interior design. Subsequently, she became a registered architect. She highlighted Barcelona's profound influence on her work, noting the city's strong design culture where even young clients demonstrated a keen appreciation for design, materiality, finishes, and form. Her time working for Ricardo Bofil's practice and living in one of his designed apartments in Barcelona solidified the impact of Mediterranean style on her aesthetic.
MacVeigh's approach integrates her deep understanding of construction, manufacturing, and landscape, which is reflected in her award-winning projects. She explained how her dual professions as an architect and interior designer complement each other, informing her methodology for reconfiguring layouts, optimizing spatial sequences, and meticulously detailing finishes, furniture, and lighting. A central tenet of her design philosophy is the creation of connectivity and continuity between various spaces within her projects.
Her presentation showcased the serene and refined quality of her interiors, achieved through a rigorous design process, precise construction detailing, and thoughtfully selected materials and finishes. She presented a range of projects, including her work on the Michelin-starred Chapter One restaurant and her sister's residence, which incorporates elements referencing their shared childhood memories. MacVeigh emphasized the collaborative nature of her work, frequently crediting skilled craftspeople such as David Coyne for joinery and Bernard Hickie for landscaping. She summarized her design philosophy as ensuring that "Everything has to make sense."
Design Week Dublin, partnered with Range Rover, served as the platform for this insightful discussion. The article also included a gallery of attendees, photographed by Conor Healy of Picture It Pix.
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