By Kien Lee
In the world of high horology, time is rarely just a matter of minutes and hours, but at Urwerk, it has become a full-blown celestial event.
With the debut of the UR-10 SpaceMeter, the Swiss maison invites us to reconsider our place in the universe through a timepiece that measures the silent, sweeping distances our planet travels across the stars. While the independent watchmaker is famously known for its avant-garde satellite displays, this new creation marks a poetic return to a more classical silhouette, featuring a round case and a sophisticated center dial that feels both nostalgic and daringly futuristic.

The soul of the UR-10 is deeply rooted in a family legacy, sparked when co-founder Felix Baumgartner’s father discovered a rare nineteenth-century pendulum clock. That antique marvel did not merely tell the time but tracked the rotation of the Earth, serving as the ultimate muse for this modern masterpiece.

On the wrist, the UR-10 performs a similar magic trick, using three elegant sub-dials to track our progress through the cosmos. At two o’clock, a counter follows the Earth’s daily rotation, while the indications at four and nine o’clock monitor our steady journey around the sun.

Beyond its philosophical charm, the UR-10 is a triumph of technical finesse and slender proportions. The steel and titanium case stands at a remarkably thin 7.13 millimeters, housing a complex manual of skeletonized wheels that weigh no more than a single eyelash.

On the reverse, a peripheral hand traces a twenty-four-hour scale against the caseback, mirroring the Earth’s own rotation in a graceful display of mechanical artistry.
It is a timepiece for the modern voyager, a reminder that even when we stand perfectly still, we are all passengers on a magnificent journey through the time-space continuum.