Fake Realness Installation by NULA.STUDIO + PALMA
Experimental installation blending recycled vinyl, architectural illusion, and material innovation to question authenticity, permanence, and circularity in design.
At the intersection of material innovation and architectural illusion, the Fake Realness installation by NULA.STUDIO (Madrid) and PALMA (Mexico) challenges conventional boundaries between authenticity and fabrication. Presented at the URVANITY contemporary art fair in Madrid, this experimental space explores the shifting perceptions of materiality in an era of technological evolution and circular design.


A Collaboration of Material Intelligence
In collaboration with TARKETT, a leader in sustainable surfaces, the installation investigates the life cycle of synthetic materials through a poetic and critical lens. The centerpiece is a series of seemingly massive, two-meter-thick curtains crafted from vinyl that mimics the texture of granite. These "levitating" elements float above a crushed version of the same material—highlighting the recyclability and regenerative potential of contemporary industrial design.


Cycles of Destruction and Rebirth
At its core, Fake Realness is about repetition, transformation, and return. The material on display is not just for show—it is both origin and outcome. Once the exhibition concludes, all components will be crushed and reconstituted, reentering the production cycle to form new surfaces again. This cyclical approach calls into question the authenticity of form, asking: What is real if everything can be remade infinitely?


Conceptual Depth and Artistic Relevance
The installation’s visual contradiction—heavy forms appearing light, artificial textures resembling nature—provokes visitors to reassess their assumptions about material truth and architectural permanence. It is an embodiment of “fake realness”, where what is synthetic can be just as meaningful, emotional, and sustainable as what is natural.


Designers at the Forefront
PALMA, with members Ilse Cárdenas, Regina de Hoyos, and Diego Escamilla, has emerged as a critical voice in global design, recognized by Wallpaper* as one of the Top 20 emerging architecture practices in 2021 and awarded the League Prize by The Architectural League of New York.
NULA.STUDIO, founded by Laia Cervelló and Miguel Fernández-Galiano, operates from Madrid with a mission rooted in social transformation and respectful experimentation. Their work spans adaptive reuse projects like the Foios Town Hall in Valencia and the Xoane Civic Center in Galicia, always grounded in site-specific dialogue and material consciousness.
Fake Realness is more than an installation—it is a manifesto for the future of material culture, a confrontation between artifice and integrity, and a celebration of how architecture can bephemeral and regenerative.



All Photographs are works ofJosé Hevia