Necklace House explores single-level living through a dispersed architectural composition within an Athenian suburban context. The project consists of seven volumes connected by a lightweight steel-and-glass corridor, allowing domestic life to unfold horizontally rather than through vertical hierarchy.

The volumes are conceived in rammed earth and positioned in deliberate relation to existing vegetation, daylight conditions, and framed views toward a neighbouring park. What appears as a loose arrangement is the result of a precise spatial strategy, where separation and connection are carefully balanced to create varied degrees of privacy and openness.

The linear connector functions as both circulation and threshold, mediating between interior and exterior while maintaining visual continuity across the site. Necklace House proposes a domestic landscape defined by material consistency, environmental responsiveness, and a sequence of inhabitable moments rather than a singular formal gesture.