Ater Architects uses blue curtains as walls in Kyiv apartment

EGR Apartment by Ater Architects

Cobalt-blue curtains hang in place of walls in a small apartment in Kyiv renovated by Ukrainian architecture and interiors studio Ater Architects.

Called EGR Apartment, the 65-square-metre space was cramped, featuring a compartmentalised layout with separate rooms connected by corridors.

EGR Apartment by Ater Architects

The owners, a  young couple, asked Ater Architects to transform it into a light and minimalist space.

Ater Architects removed most of the partition walls to create an open-plan layout.

EGR Apartment by Ater Architects

Only the bedroom area is separated from the main space by walls.

Everywhere else cobalt blue curtains are used to delineate zones within the apartment.

EGR Apartment by Ater Architects

The curtains are intended to contrast with the apartment’s otherwise monotone colour and material palette.

“The ambition [was] to balance the vigorous coloured accents and make the space brighter and airier while maintaining some rigour,” said Ater Architects.

EGR Apartment by Ater Architects

The ceiling in the kitchen and bathroom areas was lowered to accommodate ventilation.

An existing concrete slab ceiling was painted white across the rest of the apartment.

EGR Apartment by Ater Architects

On the floors, the architects used wide plank oak engineered flooring everywhere apart from the kitchen and bathroom areas.

The latter feature breccia flooring – a surface made from fragments of broken marble with polymer grout-filled joints.

EGR Apartment by Ater Architects

In the kitchen, the architects installed black ceramic tiles with pink grout that matches the cylindrical base of the customised dining table.

Oak veneer cabinets and a copper Flowerpot lamp designed by Verner Panton in 1968 add warmth.

EGR Apartment by Ater Architects

In the living room, a powder-pink sofa contrasts with the blue curtains.

A white 265 wall lamp by Paolo Rizzatto for Flos lights the space.

EGR Apartment by Ater Architects

“The living room is an area for communication,” said the architects.  “At the request of the clients, neither television nor projector was provided.”

Instead of a television, the room revolves around a graphic art work by Yulia Popova.

EGR Apartment by Ater Architects

The owners also requested an office area with a custom-designed mixing deck.

“The specific request of the apartment owner was the workplace arrangement where he would be able to do his favourite thing – composing electronic music,” explained Ater Architects.

“To do this, we have designed a table that can fit all the necessary equipment. Above the table, we have placed a photograph of the cult Berlin techno-club Berghain by Michael Belhadi.”

EGR Apartment by Ater Architects

Other custom-designed furniture includes an oak dressing table with a round backlit mirror in the bedroom and a spacious wardrobe.

This dressing area is separated from the bedroom zone by the same blue curtains.

EGR Apartment by Ater Architects

Throughout the apartment, storage is hidden behind built-in oak veneer cabinets.

Mirrored panels in the living room, bathroom and bedroom to create the illusion of “endless space”.

EGR Apartment by Ater Architects

Ater Architects, founded by Alexander Ivasiv and Yuliya Tkachenko, recently created colourful interiors for a children’s clinic in Kyiv.

Curtains are a flexible and colourful option for apartment renovations.

Floor-to-ceiling pale blue curtains carve up the interior of this open-plan apartment in Bilbao, Spain, which has been overhauled by architecture studio Azab.

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