Architecture studio DA.CH has completed Patrico, a family Greek island home that draws from elemental forms and local memory to create a space where domesticity becomes the driving architectural principle. Conceived as both a house and a home, Patrico takes its name from the Greek word meaning “the family home one comes from, the one to which one can always return.” This duality is central to the project’s design language. At its centre stands a square dome supported by a single pillar, a bold, elemental gesture that anchors the space. Around it, rooms flow naturally into one another, with soft thresholds and minimal partitions. A bench becomes a kitchen, a stair becomes an invitation; function gives way to atmosphere. Light moves across stone floors and whitewashed walls, while earthy materials -ceramics, fossils, and rough textures- connect the home to the island’s landscape and past. The vaulted ceiling, in amber tones, echoes the nearby fields and mountains, while openings frame the dome of a local church, bringing the outside in. The design focuses on domesticity: a niche to rest in, a lamp floating like a low-hung moon, a space that feels both timeless and deeply personal. With just three rooms and a living area, Patrico becomes a complete world.