In recent years, the world of wellness has undergone a profound transformation.What began as a concept related to fitness, nutrition, or exotic retreats has become a broad concept that defines an entire lifestyle. Wellness is no longer a one-time action, but a system of daily decisions aimed at improving the quality of life, reducing mental stress, creating balance, and strengthening the connection between body and mind.
Ofri Paz | Stanley Home
This transition has had a direct impact on the world of design. If in the past the home was designed around function, aesthetics and status, today it is designed around feeling. Feeling precedes form, experience precedes object. Light, temperature, material, acoustics, smell and texture all become an integral part of the design process.
The bathroom, once seen as an operational space, is becoming one of the central foci of this revolution. It is no longer just a place for hygiene, but a space of detachment. A moment where the day stops. A place where water does not just flow but creates an experience. The shower is no longer a functional act but a ritual.


From the MOOOI collection for ABK – can be found at the branch of the Ceramic Creation Company


From the MOOOI collection for ABK – can be found at the branch of the Ceramic Creation Company
At the same time, technology supports and expands this concept. Advanced spa systems, temperature control, currents, dynamic lighting and personal climate solutions allow everyone to create their own precise environment. The house is no longer dependent on the outside – it becomes a controlled system that responds to the personal needs of the residents.
Alongside technology, there is a growing return to nature. Natural materials, daylight, quiet palettes, and calm minimalism replace decorative clutter. Less statement and more balance. Less showiness and more emotion.
Six creators, designers and architects present their personal interpretation of wellness in home design, each from a different angle – from technological spa rooms to calm northern simplicity, from rich materiality to quiet monochromaticity. Together they paint a clear picture: the home of 2026 is not just beautiful – it is healing.
Architect Shlomi Levin

Architect Shlomi Levin identifies a deep cultural process in wellness. According to him, the rise in income levels and the change in the perception of quality of life are directly affecting home design. People are no longer looking for a momentary spa experience on vacation, but are seeking to incorporate it into their daily lives.
Home spa areas are gaining significant momentum. Despite the warm climate, people are choosing to bring saunas and hot tubs into private homes, and the experience is also spilling over into outdoor spaces. Alongside these, salt rooms in homes, ice baths, rooms cooled at extremely low temperatures, and thermal pools that heat and maintain water depth and countercurrents for swimming are also being developed.
Beyond aesthetics, technology is what makes this revolution possible. The home becomes a controlled system. We are no longer dependent on the external environment but create the exact conditions for ourselves. We determine the temperature, the flow, the internal climate. Wellness, for him, is an expression of conscious control over the quality of life.
Interior Designer – Shir Maydan

For designer Shir Meydan, wellness translates first and foremost into silence. Not design drama or material overload, but harmony that is felt immediately upon entering the space. In the projects she designs, she makes sure to bring nature inside through natural stone, sand tones, and a monochromatic palette with lots of white, a choice that allows light to be a central player in the design.
According to her, the house should speak quietly. When the colors are calm and the materials are natural, a sense of daily relaxation is created. The projects do not try to impress but to create peace. The stone, soft textures and desert tones create continuity between the exterior and the interior and give the space depth without weighing it down.
Wellness, for her, is not a single element but an overall atmosphere. It is created from harmony between material, light and environment, from a balanced palette that allows you to breathe. A space that does not strive to be impressive, but rather precise, calm and inclusive. Her approach seeks to create harmony between material, light and landscape. A place where space does not dominate but accompanies. A home that creates peace through restraint.
Interior designer Adi Shamsian

For designer Adi Shamsian, wellness is first and foremost a way of life. Not an external morning ritual, but a daily awareness of the quality of life. In her eyes, the feeling is more important than the appearance. Less formal perfection and more order, calm and belonging. When you enter a space and feel peaceful, this is true wellness.
At the same time, she emphasizes that it is impossible to ignore the material and the practical. We may seek spirituality and relaxation, but ultimately we are material people. A shower should be luxurious and properly planned, with enough space for a toilet and shower, a large sink made of durable and strong material that will not require constant maintenance. In her eyes, this is an inseparable combination, beauty alongside functionality.
In her material choices, she tends to use tiles that are as close-fitting and as large as possible, because the larger the tile, the cleaner and more spacious the feeling. Sometimes she chooses a power wall and gives it a design boost with a mosaic or artistic pattern, not as decoration but as a continuation of the design language. The bathroom can become a masterpiece, a space that has a statement beyond function.
Architect Raz Keshals

Architect Raz Keshals refers to wellness as a total sensory experience. A disconnection from the external environment, a time when we turn our attention inward. He describes it as All About Me, a moment when the home becomes a personal space dedicated to body and soul.
In design, he says, it is impossible to create a true wellness experience without natural materials. Soft, warm woods like cedar, cedar or iroko, natural stones and materials that bring with them the texture of nature. The energy of the materials, he emphasizes, affects our feeling. The touch, the smell, the heat, all of these are an integral part of the experience.
Lighting plays a central role. Chromotherapy, warm lighting, hidden lighting that creates levitation and layers of depth. Light that does not blind but envelops. Aromatherapy and fragrance also enter the discourse as part of conscious planning. At the same time, technology today enables advanced spa systems in the home — spa showers, bathtubs with streams, bathtubs with water movement. The home is no longer just a living space but a private home spa, a system that allows for a complete wellness experience within the routine.
Interior designer Liad Yosef

Wellness in the home has long been no longer a passing trend, but a concept of life that also shapes the way we plan and experience space. The designer for the destination describes it as a return to simplicity: less clutter, more natural light, more connection to the landscape and nature. According to him, his inspiration comes precisely from the north where he grew up – from the streams, mountains and snow of Mount Hermon – places that remind us of how much power silence and natural materials have. In the design of the house, this is expressed in soft minimalism, calm spaces and a precise choice of materials that allow the house to be a place that truly relaxes us. Ultimately, according to him, a good home is one that is easy and pleasant to grow a life in – a place that balances simplicity, softness and planning intelligence, which proves once again that sometimes it is preciselyless is more.
This approach is also reflected in the proportions of the space and the way people use it on a daily basis. When you strip away unnecessary layers of design and focus on what’s important, a sense of clarity and peace is created. Such homes don’t try to impress with quantity or material wealth, but with the quality of the experience they create. They allow people to feel comfortable, raise a family, entertain friends, or simply pause for a moment in the midst of a busy day. Ultimately, wellness-based design seeks to create a balanced and intelligent environment – a home that feels natural, pleasant, and true to life itself.
Interior designer Sandra Haliva

For the designerSandra Haliva,Wellness begins with our most everyday encounter with the home. The bathroom. She is not talking about exaggerated luxury or particularly expensive materials, but about the quality of the experience. According to her, it is not the most expensive ceramics that create a sense of calm, nor the most luxurious bathtub that will give depth to the space, but the attention to detail, the level of care, the way things are laid out and planned.
She emphasizes that the bathroom is one of the most significant spaces in the home because it is completely personal. It is the place where a person meets themselves, at the beginning or end of the day. A luxurious shower, a rain head from which the water pours gently and allows you to relax, a designed faucet that adds presence but does not dominate, these are the elements that create an experience.
She talks about personal expression. Some people prefer quiet and minimalism, and some people add a colorful twist, special carpentry or prominent marble. For her, wellness occurs in the moment when the room is well-maintained, invested, precise, a place that allows you to stop and breathe. No longer a functional space, but an environment that creates a daily experience of calm.
Photography | Raisa Vervitsky
Co-produced by Ceramic Creation | Setai Hotel Tel Aviv
Where design meets lifestyle
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Where design meets lifestyle
Where design meets lifestyle