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The HM11 Architect is MB&F's most structurally ambitious Horological Machine yet, a 42mm titanium case that reads as a cross-section of a futurist building rendered in metal and sapphire. The high-arched crystal dome turns the movement itself into the architecture, putting the in-house automatic caliber on display as both engine and facade. If you find most haute horlogerie too restrained, this is the watch that will not apologize for what it is.
MB&F launched the Horological Machine series in 2007 as a deliberate rejection of traditional watch design, treating each reference as a collaboration between founder Max Busser and a network of specialist craftspeople. The HM11 arrived in 2023 as the latest and most structurally complex iteration, with the caliber developed entirely in-house rather than sourced or heavily modified from an established manufacturer. The arched sapphire dome is the defining visual move: it frames the movement like a nave frames a cathedral ceiling, giving the watch a sense of interior space that flat-crystal watches cannot achieve.
The 42mm titanium case keeps weight manageable for something this sculptural, and the choice of titanium over steel or gold signals that MB&F treats this as a functional object first, art object second.
The HM11 is a production watch, not a limited edition, but boutique allocation means finding one at list price outside the authorized network is genuinely difficult. Sapphire dome crystals of this curvature are expensive to replace and require a watchmaker experienced with MB&F specifically; budget for that before you buy. The in-house HM11 caliber is well-engineered but young, with a shorter track record than movements from decades-old manufacture partners.
Secondary market pricing is volatile because the buyer pool is narrow: collectors who specifically want this watch will pay a premium, and everyone else walks past it. Confirm the full set of original packaging, warranty card, and service documentation before purchasing pre-owned, as incomplete sets suppress resale significantly.
New HM11 references transact near retail when they surface, with boutique pricing typically in the mid-five-figure range depending on configuration. Pre-owned supply is thin this early in the reference's life, so genuine market comparables are limited. Secondary premiums exist but are driven by scarcity rather than sustained collector demand, which makes current prices a fair reflection of enthusiasm rather than a reliable long-term signal.
Service intervals for the in-house HM11 caliber are recommended at approximately five years, and MB&F strongly prefers that work goes through their Geneva atelier or an authorized service partner with access to proprietary caliber parts. The domed sapphire crystal assembly is not interchangeable with off-the-shelf components, so any watchmaker outside the authorized network should be vetted carefully before you hand them the watch.
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The HM11 case profile must match the official MB and F Architect specification exactly; any variation is a non-genuine piece.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| case | HM11 Architect case profile | Case profile consistent with official MB and F HM11 Architect specification | Any case profile variation; non-genuine piece |
| movement | In-house caliber finishing | Movement finishing consistent with MB and F house standard | Finishing below MB and F standard; non-genuine or modified movement |
| dial | Display configuration | Display configuration consistent with official HM11 specification | Display inconsistency; non-genuine configuration |