The idea
The idea
Origin
Why ONO exists
I created ONO because I’ve experienced how different it feels to stay somewhere for a few days versus actually living there for a while.
When you stay longer, you don’t need a place that simply looks good in photos. You need a place that works. A space that supports your daily life without constantly reminding you that you’re just visiting.
It’s not about being on holiday. It’s about continuing your life in another city. You still work. You cook. You rest. You have routines. And over time, small things matter more than decoration ever could.
For me, a temporary home should feel stable. Not improvised. Not a hotel with a kitchen.
ONO is built around that belief. A place that doesn’t try to impress you every day, but simply works and gradually starts to feel like yours.
“A temporary home should feel stable.
Not improvised. Not a hotel with a kitchen.”
The minimum
Why ONO starts at 60 days
The 60-day minimum was not added later. It was part of the idea from the beginning.
Shorter stays create a different dynamic. There is more transition, more turnover, and a stronger sense that everything is temporary. That affects how a place feels.
ONO isn’t designed around movement. It’s designed around staying.
Sixty days give you time to settle in properly. To stop counting weeks. To build routines and let the city become familiar.
That kind of shift becomes easier when you know you’re not leaving again in a few days. The apartment reflects that.
From the founder
A personal note
The idea for ONO grew out of my own experience of living and working in different cities for extended periods of time.
I became aware of how much the space itself matters over time. Some places make it easier to sleep well, to focus, and to settle into a rhythm. Others never quite allow you to relax, even if everything looks right on the surface.
Good light, a layout that makes sense, a kitchen you can actually use, storage that works, materials that do not feel temporary. Too often, furnished apartments are either overly minimal or overloaded with decoration. What is often missing is thoughtfulness.
ONO is my attempt to create something in between. A space that feels calm and considered, and simply works.