At the height of Miami’s cultural week, oliFLOR was honored to transform 1 Hotel South Beach into an evening jungle garden for the Maison Perrier-Jouët. In celebration of their decade-long partnership with Design Miami, the champagne house partnered with Emmy-nominated host and chef Sophia Roe to create 1 With Nature—an exclusive, one-night-only experience designed to honor the earth while elevating the senses.
From lush, overhead canopies to sculpted tablescapes, our floral work became the architecture for the evening. Each bloom was hand-selected to speak to the event’s ethos: luxury in harmony with nature. No floral foam, no wasteful excess—just sustainable design crafted to captivate and inspire.
For this collaboration, the design brief called for something immersive, artistic, and wildly alive. Not polished perfection, but purposeful placement. We leaned into nature’s asymmetry, building a visual language from tropical foliage, sculptural heliconia, and lush layers of cascading green.
The table became a tropical jungle floor—anchored by sculptural vessels and flower frogs that eliminated the need for floral foam entirely. Blooms spilled upward and outward, moving the eye and mimicking growth in its rawest form. Canopies of ferns and monstera danced above the guests, turning an open-air space into a curated jungle.
Sustainability wasn’t an afterthought—it was the blueprint.
No waste. No excess. No compromise.
Each flower was sourced with care, and every stem, once its moment was over, was returned to the earth through our composting partnership.
The final result? A dining experience where design didn’t just decorate—it transformed.
Perrier-Jouët’s legacy is built on craftsmanship and nature—values we share, and ones we honored through every detail of this installation. From soil to stem to setting, our goal was simple: create floral design that does more than look good. Design that tells a story. One of responsibility, reverence, and rooted beauty.
For guests—from global tastemakers to artists and influencers—the space became part of the memory. The florals weren’t backdrop. They were the stage.
And long after the candles burned down and the plates were cleared, the impact remained—not in landfill, but in legacy.