CONCEPTSparse geometry and white color combined with natural oiled oak and anthracite gray surfaces as a backdrop for colorful play in the space. The garden as an endlessly changing image. An interior for a young couple who care about every detail. We created a kind of neutral backdrop that can be supplemented almost arbitrarily with elements according to the owners' taste.
COLOR, MATERIALSWhite serves as the base color. This applies to the walls, built-in furniture, and the cement topping floor in the ground floor of the house. All this, combined with natural oiled oak, which flows down the stairs from the upper floor to the ground floor, intersecting with the austere white cement topping.
The furniture pieces are mainly designed in a combination of natural oak, anthracite gray surfaces, and white.
The interior balances on the edge of austerity in the materials used and the shapes of the furniture, but this was intentional, leading to a much stronger perception of the outdoor space. The garden seems to have become part of the main living space, as if it forms an endlessly changing living image that is the strongest and most important element of the entire interior.
LAYOUTWe got to the project relatively in time, so there was room for adjusting the layout and other construction modifications.
Along the entrance hallway, a technical background with a cloakroom is designed, with access to the garage. Furthermore, a separate toilet. The wall that separates this background from the hallway is designed in a furniture-like manner, consisting of a combination of solid panels and hidden doors.
The hallway is interrupted by the entrance to the staircase to the upper floor, with the entire staircase and its entrance being made of a different material than the ground floor floor.
The main living space is dominated by a uniquely shaped kitchen island, supplemented with a kitchen set with a work surface along one wall of the room.
The entire space opens up towards the garden.
On the upper floor, there has been a significant layout modification so that, contrary to the original plans, two bathrooms were created: one for the children's room and study/guest room, the other as part of the "parental wing" - the bedroom with a cloakroom.
A milk glass viewport was created between the parents' bedroom and bathroom to create an intimate atmosphere.