Learn To Fly
Tulum has a way of teaching you patience.
When we started, the place wasn’t ready at all. No power. No water. Barely any walls. What existed on paper felt almost impossible to imagine in real life. Designing something is one thing—bringing it into the physical world is a completely different challenge.
Every line drawn, every idea planned, meets reality at some point. Materials don’t arrive on time. Measurements change. Things that looked perfect on paper demand new solutions when they’re built by hand. That’s when the journey really begins.
We decided to build our own furniture. It sounded easy, but guess what? It was not! But creating it with our hands made the space more honest. More human. Every imperfection became part of the story. Every adjustment taught us something new.
We are still not ready. And that’s important to say.
We are still working. Still building. Still learning. The project is alive, moving day by day. Progress doesn’t always look clean, but it’s real.
What keeps everything moving forward is commitment—and the people around you. Niko has been doing an incredible job, holding the vision while navigating the chaos of construction and reality. This kind of work doesn’t happen alone.
Tulum reminded us that success isn’t about arriving. It’s about walking the path, even when the road isn’t finished. The only way to know if something will work is to start building it—piece by piece, mistake by mistake.
If you’re thinking about doing something new, don’t wait until everything is perfect. It won’t be. Start anyway. The journey will teach you what no plan ever could.