The Azimut Grande Trideck receives a refined interior redesign by m2atelier
Step aboard any Azimut vessel and you can expect to be immediately cocooned in Italian style and refinement. The shipyard, known for its elegant forms, technical innovation, and a sophisticated design language, has become a defining force in the world of luxury yachting since it was founded by Paolo Vitelli in 1969.
While the shipyard’s vessels still ooze the same Italian flair, it seems the brand is slowly recalibrating its design ethos for a new generation of contemporary yachtsmen. This new approach has been rendered in the latest iteration of the brand’s flagship 38-metre Azimut Grande Trideck, an expansive superyacht whose interiors now reflect a more restrained, tactile, and emotionally intuitive vision of life at sea.

The new interior spaces, designed by Milan-based studio m2atelier, trades overt luxury for subtle sophistication. Defined by the studio as Barefoot Luxury, the aesthetic favours natural textures, spatial lightness and flow, and clean horizontal lines.
“What we wanted to achieve with m2atelier was an interior vision where every element sparks emotional resonance,” says Federico Lantero, Head of Product Design at Azimut. “It goes beyond elegance, it’s about crafting an atmosphere that evolves with those who experience it, offering an inviting calm paired with confident sophistication.”

It seems Azimut and m2atelier have done just that. A key feature in the interior spaces is the use of light, which flows through expansive windows and open sightlines, softly defining its inherent volumes and drawing the sea into every space. Thanks to this open-air structure, the entire yacht can be experienced single glance, from the saloon to the owner’s suite and out toward the horizon.

Elsewhere, the vessel’s Unveiling Wall introduces a moment of ingenuity. Composed of vertical slats and fitted with a custom-engineered sliding mechanism, it conceals a television. When not in use, the feature wall can be used to display artworks or simply stand as a sculptural element that ties the room together.
“For us, light is not an accessory,” says Marijana Radovic and Marco Bonelli, co-founders of m2atelier. “It’s the silent force that gives form to space, reveals the textures of materials, and brings emotional depth to the onboard experience.”