A sharpened curatorial vision defines Hall 3 at Ambiente 2026, where the growing Interior Looks area showcases a hand-picked selection of design-forward brands, offering hospitality professionals and interior specialists an elevated gateway into the future of living spaces.
As Ambiente 2026 sharpens its positioning as a hub for hospitality and contract design, Hall 3 – and in particular the Interior Looks area – emerges as one of the fair’s most telling indicators of where the industry’s aesthetic and functional sensibilities are heading. A dedicated brand area within the Interior Design product segment, Interior Looks can be experienced in Hall 3.1 with strong brands and exciting new additions. Presented like a curated landscape, it brings together craftsmanship, material refinement and the quieter forms of innovation that define much of today’s premium interior world.
Presented like a curated landscape, Interior Looks brings together craftsmanship, material refinement and the quieter forms of innovation
In Hall 3.1, long-established manufacturers such as Bielefelder Werkstätten, Christine Kröncke, JAB Anstoetz Group, Rodam, Scholtissek, Signet and TF fine furniture set the tone with collections that exhibit both continuity and careful evolution. They are joined by newer additions like Acapulco Design, Artanova, Conde House Europe, Coozus, Holtkötter Licht, Müller Möbelfabrikation or Topstar with the brands Wagner and Sitness whose presence expands the design vocabulary and introduces a more international resonance. Taken together, the selection reflects an industry that values longevity but remains open to fresh narratives. all images courtesy of Ambiente
The surrounding constellation of brands – among them Andersen Furniture, Design House Stockholm, Blomus, Ethnicraft, Serax, Hey-Sign, Rohleder, Vario Büromöbel, Jan Kurtz, Luiz, Zieta Studio and traditional houses like Dibbern, Guaxs, or Orrefors Kosta Boda – adds layers of texture and typology. Their interplay highlights the multifaceted nature of contemporary hospitality spaces, where dining, lounging, working and arrival zones increasingly blend. Meanwhile, lifestyle-oriented names such as Designletters, Gardeco Objects, Muubs and Philippi contribute a more expressive, tactile element that appeals to the detail-oriented mindset of architects and interior designers.
In Hall 3.0, exhibitors including Hübsch, Lübech Living and Max Benjamin extend the conversation into decorative and atmospheric design, rounding out a hall that has become a reliable source of project-ready inspiration. Rather than a single aesthetic position, it offers a curated panorama: one that mirrors the layered realities of contemporary hospitality and its blending of lifestyle and long-term performance.
Guest Feature by Claire Brodka / Architonic
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