Meridiani
Meridiani has always approached furniture a little differently. It’s not just about filling a space—it’s about shaping how that space feels over time.
Founded in 1996 in Brianza, at the center of Italy’s furniture-making tradition, the brand has grown into a quiet force in luxury Italian furniture. Not loud, not trend-driven—just consistent, thoughtful, and very sure of its point of view. There’s an ease to it that’s hard to manufacture.
At first glance, the aesthetic feels rooted in modern Italian design—clean lines, controlled proportions, subtle palettes. But the more time you spend with it, the more layered it becomes. Nothing is overworked. A sofa sits the way it should. A table doesn’t try too hard to be noticed. It all feels considered, but not rigid.
One of the things Meridiani does especially well is flexibility. This is where its strength in custom furniture really shows. Pieces can be adapted, resized, reupholstered—adjusted in ways that make sense for real homes and real projects. For designers working on high-end interiors, that kind of freedom matters. It allows for continuity without everything feeling identical.
Materials play a big role here, too. You see it in the fabrics, the leathers, the finishes—nothing flashy, but everything carefully chosen. There’s a kind of quiet confidence in how these elements come together, which is probably why the brand sits so comfortably within the world of high-end furniture without needing to announce itself.
Over the years, Meridiani has expanded well beyond Italy, with showrooms and projects across major design cities. Still, it hasn’t really lost that sense of restraint that defines modern Italian furniture at its best.
At Niche Beverly, Meridiani feels like a natural fit. It speaks to a way of living that values subtlety, comfort, and longevity over statement pieces. The kind of luxury furniture that doesn’t try to impress immediately—but does, quietly, over time.