
Apartment
Storm in Paris
There are colors that decorate. And there are colors that define entire worlds.
This suite is conceived as a tribute to bourgeois, atmospheric, intellectual Paris of old interiors, art deco geometry, and quiet nocturnal elegance.
At the heart of its identity lies a color.
The entire apartment is shaped around “Storms in Paris”, the iconic deep blue-green created by Tony Piloseno, founder of Tonester Paints. This color, now an international reference point in contemporary interior culture, was conceived as an emotional surface rather than a decorative shade. It is a dark, moody, jewel-toned bluish green — sometimes leaning toward deep teal, sometimes falling into smoky grey — depending on light, shadow, and time of day.
With 38 square meters of interior space, designed for two, this apartment unfolds like an intimate urban residence set inside alpine nature. A fully integrated kitchen and dining zone forms its social heart, while the bathroom remains subtly withdrawn behind a quiet hallway — a small architectural pause between movement and stillness.
But its true extension is outside.

The apartment opens directly onto the largest terrace of the entire W7SKY estate — a generous wooden platform suspended between forest, air, and light. This terrace is not an accessory. It is a second living room. A continuation of the interior language.
“Storms in Paris” is a space for those who feel architecture through color.
Where vintage is not nostalgia, but cultural memory.
Inside, the world changes.
It carries deliberately dramatic intent:
a color inspired by Parisian skies before a storm, by green patinated copper roofs, by rainy boulevard reflections and the intellectual density of old European salons
Here, this color is treated almost with devotion.
It wraps walls, connects furnishings, softens architecture.
It absorbs and releases light depending on the hour — sometimes calm, sometimes intense, yet always alive.
Within this setting, carefully selected vintage pieces anchor time, memory and materiality
At the dining table stand a set of Paul McCobb walnut frame chairs for Calvin (circa 1960) — sculptural, balanced, understated icons of American midcentury modernism. Their proportions give the room a quiet authority, their wood warmth counterbalancing the cool depth of the green surroundings.
Elements of modernist warmth
Above, floating in the air, the atmosphere is completed by the Florian Schulz “Onos 55” pendant lamp in deep green from the 1970s — European modernism with a sculptural soul. Its light is not just functional. It performs.
The bed is a handcrafted piece, completed with an Original in Berlin headboard, creating a sleeping zone that feels intimate, framed, and protected.
Next to it, a mid-century modern bedside table introduces a subtle contrast:
with mint green and pale blue drawers and a teddy-fabric body.
A small, slightly surreal object — somewhere between comfort, irony, and design gesture.
Throughout the space, Japanese-inspired ceramic vessels and cups appear like quiet witnesses. Their earthy textures, matte glazes and imperfect geometry add a wabi-sabi counter-layer to the bourgeois Parisian narrative — grounding luxury in craft, humility and handwork.
Amenities – The Essentials of Quiet Independence and living Comfort
Every apartment is conceived not only as a place to stay,
but as a temporary home shaped for slow living and effortless autonomy.
Each apartment is equipped with a fully appointed kitchen — including cookware, tableware, glassware and essential utensils as well as coffee machine and kettle— allowing guests to cook, prepare and linger over meals in complete privacy, at their own rhythm.
The bathroom becomes a space of ritual and restoration, stocked with refined bathing amenities, soft towels, bathrobes and a hairdryer — designed to support both morning and evening routines.
For security a discreet in-room safe is provided, while high-speed wireless internet offers seamless connectivity, without interrupting the stillness of the space.
A flat-screen television is subtly integrated into the interior, available for quiet evenings, music, or cinematic retreat — present, but never dominant.
For extended stays and true independence, each suite also includes access to essential household tools:
a vacuum cleaner, iron and ironing board, and basic cleaning equipment — so the apartment can be lived in, not merely occupied.
At W7SKY, comfort is never loud.
It functions calmly in the background — supporting your stay, without ever disrupting its atmosphere.
Not loud. But unforgettable.






















































