A second space for movement and becoming — where every surface, colour and corner is a quiet invitation to explore.
The brief for this second psychomotor practice was both clinical and profoundly human: create a space where a child's nervous system can settle, where movement feels like permission rather than performance. The design response was to scale everything — colours, proportions, textures — to the child's experience of the world.
Deep sage-green walls absorb sound and anxiety in equal measure. Padded corner zones, foam-covered climbing elements and sensory tactile walls are integrated without any of the visual noise typical of therapy environments. The result reads as a designed interior first, a therapeutic tool second — because a child who feels at ease explores further, and a child who explores further, grows.
« A child who feels safe in a space will use every centimetre of it. »
— Nada Chraibi