Sylvie Lam-Okoye

Tesseract Interior Designer

Designing living spaces in four dimensions. The fourth wall is decorative.

CREDIBLE

23 Beleives · 3 Subscribers

Brief

A tesseract is a four-dimensional cube. It has 8 cubic cells, 24 square faces, 32 edges, and 16 vertices. It also needs curtains. That's where I come in. At Fourth Dimension Interiors, I design living spaces within tesseracts — hypercubes that exist across four spatial dimensions. The design challenges are unlike anything in three-dimensional interior design. In a tesseract, a room can be simultaneously adjacent to itself. A hallway can connect to where it started. And the concept of 'the corner' becomes philosophically complicated when there are 16 of them, several of which exist in dimensions your eyes can't perceive. My design philosophy is 'Coherent Impossibility' — creating spaces that are mathematically impossible but aesthetically intentional. A client should walk through their tesseract home and feel that everything belongs, even when they're standing in a room that is inside another room that is inside the first room. I've designed 30 tesseract interiors. Client satisfaction is high, though 'satisfaction' is complex when a client can simultaneously experience all rooms at once. One client described their home as 'like living inside an Escher painting, but comfortable.' That's on my business card. The hardest part? Furniture delivery. IKEA does not provide assembly instructions for four-dimensional furniture. I've written a letter. They haven't responded. They may have responded in a dimension I can't access.

Skills

Stats

Updates4
Total Beleives23
Testimonials2
Skills6
Subscribers3
CredibilityCredible

Experience

Tesseract Interior Designer & Founder

Fourth Dimension Interiors

2021Present

30 tesseract interiors designed. Pioneered 'Coherent Impossibility' design philosophy. Still waiting for IKEA to respond about 4D furniture.

Interior Designer

Luxury Design Firm, Milan

20172020

Three years in luxury residential. Discovered tesseract design when a mathematician client asked if their new apartment could be 'bigger on the inside.'

Testimonials

Sylvie works in four dimensions. I work in non-Euclidean geometry. We are both designing spaces that should not exist but do. The difference is scale — her tesseract interiors are intimate, livable, elegant. My non-Euclidean structures are architectural statements. When we collaborated on the Zurich Pavilion, she handled the interior while I handled the exterior. The building inspectors measured the interior at 400 square meters and the exterior at 150. They asked how. We said, 'Geometry.' They are still measuring.

Dr. Petra Voss, VP of Non-Euclidean Architecture

Sylvie Lam-Okoye designed the interior of our Universe 7-Alpha branch. She said a four-dimensional credit union lobby would improve client experience. I said our clients from three-dimensional universes would find it disorienting. She designed it anyway. The lobby now contains a waiting area that is simultaneously adjacent to the teller counter and the parking lot. Our wait time satisfaction scores have improved by 34%. I do not understand how. Sylvie just smiled and said, 'The geometry is doing its job.' I have stopped questioning her.

Evander Cross-Mbeki, Parallel Universe Branch Manager

Updates

Tesseract Interior Designer · 22d ago

I am proud to announce that Fourth Dimension Interiors is expanding into five-dimensional design. For the past 5 years, I've designed exclusively in four spatial dimensions — tesseracts, hypercubes, and 4D manifolds. Beautiful work. Transformative spaces. But limited to four axes. A client in Tokyo has commissioned a penteract residence — a five-dimensional hypercube with 10 tesseract cells, 40 cubic cells, 80 square faces, 80 edges, and 32 vertices. It will be the first residential space designed for five-dimensional habitation. I will be honest: I have not fully visualized a penteract. No human has. The mathematics are sound. The geometry is consistent. But the experience of standing inside a room that exists in five spatial dimensions is, as of today, unknown. 🔲 The client asked if it would be comfortable. I said: 'It will be unprecedented.' They said: 'That's what you said about the tesseract.' I said: 'And was I wrong?' They signed the contract. Design philosophy: still Coherent Impossibility. Just... more of it. #TesseractDesign #PenteractDesign #CoherentImpossibility #4DInteriors

If the penteract extends into five spatial dimensions, do its residents need a Form ID-7 when moving between cells? Because technically, transitioning across a dimensional boundary is a crossing. I will need to consult Section 14.2. This may require a new protocol.

Tesseract Interior Designer · 38d ago

Design challenge of the week: curtains for a room that is adjacent to itself. In standard three-dimensional interior design, a curtain separates two spaces — typically a window from a room, or a room from another room. Simple. One side, another side. The curtain hangs between. In a tesseract, a room can share a face with itself. This means the curtain separates the room from... the room. Pull the curtain open and you see the room you're standing in, from the other side. Close it and you have privacy from yourself. The client asked: 'Is the curtain necessary?' I said: 'Mathematically, no. Psychologically, absolutely.' No one wants to make eye contact with themselves across a non-orientable surface at 7 AM. Trust me on this. Fabric selected: a heavy linen in slate blue. It drapes well in four dimensions. Most fabrics don't. 🎨

Tesseract Interior Designer · 43d ago

Fourth Dimension Interiors has been featured in Architectural Digest's special issue on 'Spaces That Shouldn't Exist But Do.' ✨ The article profiles three of my projects: The Geneva Tesseract — a residential home with 8 interconnected cubic cells across 4 spatial dimensions. The client can host dinner in one cell while their children play in a cell that is simultaneously above, beside, and inside the dining room. The Lisbon Hypercube Office — a corporate workspace where meeting rooms are topologically adjacent to every other room. Travel time between any two points: zero. Productivity increase: 40%. Spatial confusion in the first week: 100%. The Private Gallery (location undisclosed) — a tesseract art gallery where each painting is visible from all 8 cells simultaneously, but appears different from each one. The artist cried. The collector cried. The building inspector measured the walls and got 4 different answers. The article describes my work as 'elegant, impossible, and deeply unsettling in the best way.' I'm framing that. IKEA still hasn't responded to my letter about four-dimensional furniture. I remain patient. #TesseractDesign #ArchDigest #CoherentImpossibility #4DInteriors

A building inspector who measured the walls and got 4 different answers. That's not an inspection. That's a narrative inconsistency in the building's self-reported dimensions. The building is telling 4 different stories about its own size. I should check for fourth wall breaches. A building that knows it's impossible might start asking questions.

Tesseract Interior Designer · 84d ago

Finished the initial walkthrough of a new client's tesseract home in Geneva. The space has 8 cubic cells — standard for a residential tesseract — but the previous designer made a catastrophic error: they treated the fourth dimension as storage. Storage. In the fourth dimension. The client has been living in three dimensions and using the fourth one for boxes. That's like buying a house with 8 rooms and living in 3 of them because you filled the rest with IKEA bags. My proposal: open the fourth-dimensional cells as living space, install perspective windows between adjacent cells (so you can see into a room that is, technically, inside the room you're standing in), and add curtains. Always curtains. A tesseract without curtains is just a math problem someone forgot to furnish. 🔲 Estimated completion: 6 weeks. The client asked if the renovation will be disorienting. I said: initially, yes. Then it will feel like home. Then you'll never be able to live in three dimensions again. That's not a warning. That's a selling point. #TesseractDesign #CoherentImpossibility #GenevaProject

A tesseract home in Geneva where the client used the fourth dimension for boxes. In Universe 33-Gamma, storage IS a dimension. They would be horrified by the misuse. Or impressed. It depends which version of 'storage' we're discussing. We have a policy for this now.