The Saint is a wellness destination designed by architecture studio BoND in Chelsea, New York. The 102-square-metre interior contains four private wellness pods, each equipped with a dry sauna, cold-plunge bath, shower, and dressing area. BoND organized the compact plan using the logic of a bento box, defining spaces through changes in material rather than corridors. The project was developed to create a residential atmosphere, using subdued lighting and carefully selected finishes to transform a windowless interior into a quiet retreat from the surrounding city.
The interiors combine slate, terrazzo, stainless steel, cypress, walnut, and fritted glass to distinguish wet and dry areas throughout the facility. Slate-lined plunge baths are illuminated by concealed horizontal lighting, while cypress wraps the sauna rooms and walnut adds warmth to the changing areas. Floating terrazzo vanities reinforce the monolithic material palette, and fritted glass partitions introduce privacy while allowing light to diffuse between spaces.
Private Sauna Interiors
The Saint is a Private Sauna and Cold-Plunge Wellness Space in New York
Trend Themes
-
Private Wellness Pods — Compact, self-contained sauna and cold-plunge suites suggest a premium model for urban wellness venues built around privacy, personalization, and high-throughput spatial efficiency.
-
Residential Spa Design — Hospitality-inspired interiors that feel calm, warm, and home-like point to differentiation opportunities for wellness brands seeking to soften clinical or gym-based recovery environments.
-
Material-zoned Interiors — Using changes in slate, wood, glass, and terrazzo to define functions reflects a design shift toward corridor-free layouts that enhance flow in compact commercial spaces.
Industry Implications
-
Wellness Hospitality — Boutique recovery destinations can blend spa rituals, private booking models, and elevated interiors to create new premium experiences for urban consumers.
-
Interior Architecture — Design studios are positioned to develop immersive micro-environments where material transitions, lighting, and privacy treatments replace traditional spatial divisions.
-
Luxury Fitness — Recovery-focused amenities such as saunas and cold plunges are becoming lifestyle markers that expand fitness offerings beyond exercise into restorative membership experiences.