From Petal to Space: Large-Scale Floral Installations
When flowers stop being objects — and become architecture.
There is a moment when a composition exceeds its own scale.
When flowers no longer sit within a room but define it.
At Daniel Ost, that is the moment we seek — the transformation of nature into structure, of petals into presence.
These installations are not decorations.
They are environments: immersive, sculptural, and alive.
The Architecture of Scale
Designing at scale demands more than creativity — it requires engineering.
Every curve, suspension, and column must balance aesthetics with physics.
A single structure might carry thousands of stems, each one placed by hand with millimetric precision.
Our team approaches each project like architects: studying proportions, materials, and flow of movement.
Steel, bamboo, and fibre meet flowers and moss in harmonious dialogue.
The result is architecture built from nature — disciplined yet fluid, monumental yet human.
Ephemeral Mastery
Large-scale floristry is an art of impermanence.
A cathedral arch of orchids may exist for one night only.
A façade wrapped in greenery might live for a week.
But within that short life lies intensity — a moment visitors never forget.
The craft is logistical as much as creative:
planning the lifespan of each bloom,
orchestrating temperature, water, and light,
coordinating dozens of florists working in silent rhythm.
The magic happens when the final flower is placed and the structure breathes.
Designing for Emotion
Scale does not mean spectacle.
Even in vast compositions, the goal remains intimacy — the sense that the viewer is part of something living.
A floral tunnel invites immersion.
A suspended canopy invites wonder.
A sculptural column commands silence.
Each work begins not with quantity, but intention: what should this space make people feel?
That question shapes every branch and beam until emotion fills the air like fragrance.
Stories in Space
From royal weddings to fashion houses, from Corinthia Brussels to Riyadh’s palaces, our installations become stories told in space.
They reflect their context — heritage, architecture, culture — while carrying the unmistakable Daniel Ost signature:
refined structure, daring emotion, and flawless execution.
Each project is different, yet all share the same soul — a dialogue between architecture and nature.
The Beauty of the Temporary
When the event ends, the flowers return to silence.
Structures are dismantled, materials reused, and memories remain.
That fleeting nature is what makes the art sincere: it exists purely to move people, not to last forever.
Because the most powerful spaces are those that vanish —
leaving behind nothing but emotion, light, and memory.