You're the one they trust to pick the space. So don't guess. Dooni is a workshop studio in Tunis, built to make people actually participate. Not another sad conference room with no soul, zero energy, everyone glued to their phones. Come stand in it. Then put your name on it.
Come visit, grab a coffeeYou did the prep. Sharp agenda, right exercises, real outcomes. Then the room fights you. Fixed tables. Dead light. Nowhere to put anything. The group stays seated, stays quiet, stays polite. And the session you designed never happens.
The room isn't a detail. It's half the work.
One open studio in Tunis. Modular furniture you actually move. Walls you write on. Light, plants, room to breathe. Set it up as a circle, break it into corners, clear it for a standing debate... in two minutes, not two emails. We built it for our own studio, ALTO. Five years in, we figured the room was too good to keep to ourselves.
Space is never neutral. It either helps people hide, or it helps them open up. Furniture is policy. You already know this, you've felt a room kill a session. Dooni is the studio on your side.
When you recommend Dooni,
here's what comes out of your mouth and why it's easy to say.
You look good because the room makes you look good.
We get it. The name's a joke. The work isn't. “Ugly” means we don't hide behind pretty slides and furniture you're not allowed to touch. The room is built to be used, moved, written on, argued in.
Your client doesn't need another polished room to sit politely in. They need one that gets them up and making decisions.
Serious enough for them. Alive enough to actually work.
You come. You walk through it. You move a wall, sit in the light, picture your next session in it. We answer questions. We don't sell. You'll know in five minutes whether it's right for your client and you'll recommend it because you've seen it, not because we told you to.
Come visit, grab a coffeeTwelve years running workshops from Paris to Bangalore taught us one thing: the room decides more than the agenda. We write about it constantly. No fluff, just what works.
Read the NotesBefore you put your name on a room, see the room.
Thirty minutes, no pitch, and you'll know.