Product, 2025
The Pantarhei collection, designed for Il Fanale Group takes an innovative approach to lighting design, using natural materials that change with the seasons.
Interpreting the interaction between light, material, and time, Pierattelli Architetture designed a new series of outdoor lamps that merge with the surrounding landscape, enhancing the raw beauty of the materials in a delicate balance between aesthetics and functionality. This collection has two different shapes: one with a doughnut-inspired dome and the other reminiscent of a delicate petal, both available in three heights. Pantarhei’s subtle yet powerful language, bridges heritage and modernity through light—an intangible yet structural element that defines and transforms spaces. Like light, these items combine traditional craftsmanship with contemporary technology, resulting in a timeless and innovative collection.
Alongside the outdoor versions, the collection includes a rechargeable table lamp, designed for indoor and outdoor use. This battery-powered model, provided exclusively in a doughnut shape, features the same materials and design philosophy as the outdoor versions, completing the collection. Pantarhei exemplifies how light can be integrated into landscape architecture. Its optimised light distribution highlights pathways and surfaces, making it ideal for gardens, terraces, an walkways. The design subtly houses the light source, ensuring a soft, diffused illumination that blends harmoniously with its surroundings. The natural textures of terracotta and concrete allow the lamps to merge with their environment their imperfect surfaces echo the surrounding vegetation’s organic tones.
This collection embodies a sustainable vision, employing durable, low-impact materials in keeping with the industry’s increasing focus on environmental quality. The lighting solutions were designed to ensure maximum energy efficiency and visual comfort, meeting designer and end user requirements. Pierattelli Architetture explores the narrative potential of light as an architectural element guiding the eye, creating spatial hierarchies, enhancing details, and softening imperfections.