The rise of the metaverse means boundaries between physical and virtual realities continue to blur—something that has inspired architects, who are well versed in the design and construction of buildings, to take their talents to the digital sphere.
For George Bileca, the CEO of virtual reality specialist Voxel Architects, which is based on the Portuguese-administered island of Madeira, constructing in the metaverse “feels like reinventing the wheel”. “The challenge is in switching architects’ and designers’ mentality,” he says. “This is something completely new.”
The firm made a splash in the crypto world in February when it announced it was creating a 1:1 virtual replica of an 11,000 sq ft, seven-bedroom, nine-bedroom luxury mansion being built by Meta Residence, founded by luxury home builder and NFT collector Gabe Sierra. The virtual property is in The Sandbox, while the brick-and-mortar home is under construction in Miami. Both properties will be auctioned at the end of 2022 by One Sotheby’s International Realty as a single lot, and the winning bidder will have ownership rights to both the real home and its virtual counterpart. Dubbed Meta Residence One, it is a project that the firm says is the first of its kind in the world.
Voxel’s team is staffed with architects, designers and artists—and they understand better than anyone how to take advantage of space in a land and building efficiently, says Bileca. The creative process starts similarly to a real-world construction, with sketches and storyboards. The next steps are driven by information such as the size of the virtual land, visual references and the purpose of the structures.
This story is from the August 2022 edition of Tatler Hong Kong.
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This story is from the August 2022 edition of Tatler Hong Kong.
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