Enjoy our modern designs
In the harbors of Monaco and the hills above Saint-Tropez, architecture and naval engineering share the same design language. The pool table in a Riviera villa should speak it too.
The villas of the Côte d'Azur share a design vocabulary with the superyachts moored below them: fluid lines, high-gloss lacquers, and a seamless dissolve between interior and Mediterranean air. A standard pool table — dark wood, green felt, heavy proportions — breaks that vocabulary completely. Our Marine Collection was built to complete it instead.
A pool table in Monaco shouldn't look like it belongs in a pub. It should look like it belongs on the water — built from the same materials, finished to the same standard.— The premise behind the Marine Collection
316L Steel
& Carbon Fiber
Salt air is the enemy of standard furniture. Even in a climate-controlled villa, the saline humidity of the Riviera will pit standard chrome and eventually warp composite woods. Matching the durability standard of a superyacht requires the same materials that superyachts use.
We replace every standard metal component with 316L stainless — the same alloy used in marine hardware and surgical instrumentation. Polished to a mirror finish, it reflects the azure light of the coast and remains flawless for decades without pitting, oxidation, or surface degradation.
For penthouse installations or direct yacht placement where weight is a structural concern, we fabricate the frame from carbon fiber — offering the rigidity required to support a full slate bed at a fraction of the mass of solid oak. The woven surface reads as unmistakably high-performance.
Aesthetic
No wood is more synonymous with luxury boating than teak. Its grain, warmth, and tolerance of marine conditions have made it the default language of the finest vessel interiors for over a century. We collaborate directly with yacht joiners to ensure the pool table's rails match the decking of the vessel or the terrace of the villa it will inhabit.
We replicate the classic pinstripe look of a boat deck directly onto the table rails — alternating teak and holly (or lighter composite) in the precise widths used by the vessel's joiner. The effect connects the table to the room's broader material story in a way that no standard rail finish can approximate.
Using multi-layer polyester lacquers — the same chemistry applied to hull paint — we achieve a depth of gloss that standard furniture finishes cannot match. The resulting surface sits harmoniously beside Italian cabinetry, glass bulkheads, and lacquered joinery without looking like furniture that wandered in from elsewhere.
Every yacht and every Riviera villa has its own wood specification — species selection, grain direction, stain tone, and lacquer sheen are all part of a carefully controlled interior design. We request the joinery spec before fabrication begins so the table rails are matched, not approximated. The goal is a table that reads as part of the original fit-out, not as a later addition.
The Riviera
Palette
Traditional bottle green is strictly forbidden in the modern Riviera interior. The colors of this coast are drawn from the sea at different times of day, from the limestone cliffs, and from the bleached stone of the hills above the port. Our cloth selection for the Marine Collection is built around that palette.
The deep, rich teal of Petroleum Blue shifts with the quality of coastal light — reading differently at noon than at the blue hour before sunset, in exactly the way the water off Cap Ferrat does. Pearl and Shark Grey preserve the sense of space and luminosity in a sun-drenched salon without introducing competing color. For the ultimate personalization, we print the yacht's name or the estate's monogram directly onto the cloth in a tone-on-tone watermark that is visible only in raking light.
Stability at Sea
& on Land
A pool table installed directly aboard a vessel is a physics problem that standard furniture engineering was never asked to solve. The table must remain level, stable, and structurally sound against the flex and vibration of a hull under way — and must do so without damaging the deck substrate it sits on. Our bolt-down solutions address each element of that problem.
Leg assemblies are engineered with internal bolting channels that pass through the deck substrate and secure to the vessel's structural frame below — invisible from the playing surface, permanent under load.
Our slate leveling system is calibrated to hold its tolerance against the subtle flex and vibration of a vessel under way. We always recommend play while at anchor — but the table maintains level integrity regardless.
Foot assemblies are fitted with marine-grade isolation pads that distribute load without concentrating stress and prevent galvanic corrosion between the table's steel and the vessel's deck fittings.
Direct yacht installation, penthouse terraces with structural constraints, and any application where conventional leveling feet are insufficient for the substrate.
the Deck Indoors?
View our full Marine Collection to see our stainless steel and high-gloss designs in context, or contact us directly to discuss matching a table to your yacht's specific joinery specification and cloth palette.
















