From Loom to Room investigates tridimensional weaving in architecture, translating material into space, movement into form, and design into process. A scored two-meter wood cube serves as a frame, interwoven with elastic synthetic thread, where openings, intersections, and thresholds emerge. Parametric design scripts a sequence, allowing the weave—an art traditionally practiced by women—to negotiate between outside and inside, beauty and use, private and public, art and design. This work expands the role of making in design, where weaving redefines spatial and material configurations.