New Amsterdam interior by Bo Reudler Studio

Six windows with rustic white wooden shutters feature in this renovated living room by Dutch designer Bo Reudler.

New Amsterdam Interior by Bo Reudler Studio

The residents of the Amsterdam apartment already owned a cabinet from Bo Reudler‘s Slow White collection, a range of furniture made from tree branches, and asked the designer to style the room around it.

New Amsterdam Interior by Bo Reudler Studio

Reudler designed six pairs of shutters to reduce glare from the small square windows, as well as to provide more privacy from the neighbours.

New Amsterdam Interior by Bo Reudler Studio

Taking six irregularly shaped planks from a yew tree, the designer used a mix-and-match technique to create each of the panels. Rather than blocking out the light completely, every panel has a crack allows slivers of light to pass through.

New Amsterdam Interior by Bo Reudler Studio

Knots in the wood created holes in the planks and are positioned in place of handles.

New Amsterdam Interior by Bo Reudler Studio

A table and compass from the Slow White collection were added to the room to complement the cabinet and shutters, alongside the designer’s Bamboo Windsor high-back chair, a candle holder from the Haute Bamboo collection and Equus rug, a horse hide with a cutaway Fleur-de-Lis pattern.

New Amsterdam Interior by Bo Reudler Studio

See more design by Bo Reudler Studio on Dezeen, including children’s furniture shown at Dutch Design Week 2011.

New Amsterdam Interior by Bo Reudler Studio

Photography is by Raoul Kramer.

Here’s a project description from Bo Reudler Studio:


New Amsterdam interior by Bo Reudler Studio

‘There is a crack in everything, That’s how the light gets in.’ (Leonard Cohen)

For a living room interior in an Amsterdam apartment, Bo Reudler Studio designed six Slow White shutters. The high volume of the space was over flooded with light from six small west-facing windows. The brief called for something to block out glare and at the same time provide privacy from neighbours. The clients already owned a Slow White Cabinet. With this in mind they wondered if the cabinet doors could be translated into something larger: this led to the Slow White shutters.

New Amsterdam Interior by Bo Reudler Studio
Template for six yew planks

Using wood as the starting point the aim was not to completely shut out the light but create an interaction with it. By utilising the natural outlines and openings in the wood, each shutter celebrates the material and interacts with the light in a different way. Six planks were selected from a Yew tree native to Western Europe, renowned for its irregular-shaped trunk that produces whimsically shaped planks. The curving natural lines of the planks were mapped like a puzzle to create six pairs of shutters each with their own character. The holes of the knots were positioned as grips for opening and closing. Cracks in the shutters, which are also visible from the exterior, slice the light and admit glimpses of the outside while closed. The shutters bring to the forefront a forgotten building element that was once a common fixture in many homes of the past.

New Amsterdam Interior by Bo Reudler Studio
Shutter layout

The space is furnished with pieces from the studio including the Slow White table and Golden Compass that highlight the distinguishing curves of natural branches, the Haute Bamboo candleholder and Bamboo Windsor chair, a classic Western chair reinterpreted using the inherent qualities of bamboo and rattan. Resembling oversized lace with its graphic fleur-de-lys pattern cut into the horse hide, the Equus rug initiates an interaction with the floor to either hide it or reveal what’s underneath.

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Restaurang & Bar Nazdrowje by Richard Lindvall

Swedish designer Richard Lindvall has converted a car park near Stockholm into a restaurant and nightclub with copper pipes stretching across its walls and ceiling.

Restaurang & Bar Nazdrowje by Richard Lindvall

The restaurant serves Polish food, so Richard Lindvall visited a few factories in Poland to find inspiration for the project and came with a concept for an industrial interior filled with raw materials rather than soft furnishings.

Restaurang & Bar Nazdrowje by Richard Lindvall

The designer left many of the concrete surfaces exposed inside the old car park, while others he lined with plain white ceramic tiles. “The natural raw atmosphere of the space was kept and used as a base for the concept,” he says.

Restaurang & Bar Nazdrowje by Richard Lindvall

Some of the copper pipes snake across walls to function as radiators, while others create a lighting framework overhead and more can be found as plumbing for sinks in the toilets. Copper is also used for the facade of a large fireplace.

Restaurang & Bar Nazdrowje by Richard Lindvall

The bar is made from concrete, as are the shelves that span the walls behind it. Industrial lights hang from the ceiling, which the designer sourced from an old factory in the Czech Republic, and a hunting trophy is mounted to the wall.

Restaurang & Bar Nazdrowje by Richard Lindvall

Metal stools surround concrete tables in the dining room. Other details in this space include framed photographs by Mattias Lindbäck of the construction workers who installed the interior.

Restaurang & Bar Nazdrowje by Richard Lindvall

Other recently completed restaurant and bar interiors on Dezeen include a penthouse bar and nightclub in Paris with black trees inside and a bar in Vienna with a faceted ceiling of upside-down peaks.

Restaurang & Bar Nazdrowje by Richard Lindvall

See more restaurants and bars »

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Stall of Fame: CBGB Bathroom Recreated Inside Metropolitan Museum of Art

Toilets and urinals aren’t typical fodder for red-carpet conversation, but stall talk dominated on Monday evening as galagoers ascended the steps of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in ensembles that ranged from clownish to sublime. Guests were buzzing about the recreated CBGB bathroom (pictured) that is among the first things visitors encounter in the museum’s “PUNK: Chaos to Couture” exhibition, which opens to the public tomorrow. The cave-like space, scrawled with circa-1975 graffiti, is adjacent to monitors playing a looped selection of films and footage–of Blondie, the Ramones, Patti Smith, and Television–selected by Nick Knight and edited by Ruth Hogben.

“We’ve had great [design] moments in punk, but I’ve very excited about the urinal–a urinal at the Met!” said André Leon Talley at Monday’s gala. “According to Patti Smith, punk began in a urinal downtown somewhere that I never went to, so I’m excited to see that.” The Vogue veteran was dressed in an elaborately embroidered cape–think Joseph’s technicolor dreamcoat meets MacKenzie-Childs–designed for him by Tom Ford. “I love this coat and I don’t consider it punk. I just consider it appropriate for this occasion,” said Talley with a chuckle. “I said to Anna [Wintour], I didn’t do punk. I skipped punk and went straight to couture.”

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Voodoo Ray’s by Gundry & Ducker

Patterns of colourful tiles line the walls and counters of this north-east London pizza bar by architects Gundry & Ducker (+ slideshow).

Voodoo Rays by Gundry and Ducker

“We wanted to see what we could do with the 150-millimetre square-format tiles” Christian Ducker told Dezeen. “Our medley of references included graphics from New York in the 1950s and 1980s.”

The tiles spell out “pizza” in large letters along the wall running from outside the restaurant parallel to the serving counter, though the top of the word is cut off by the ceiling.

Voodoo Rays by Gundry & Ducker

Dark blue tiles cover the surfaces and seats along the same wall, while columns and beams are wrapped in yellow and red.

The late night pizza slice bar was converted from a nightclub so the architects had to start from scratch in the space.

Voodoo Rays by Gundry & Ducker

“We completely gutted the whole place, took out all the flooring and built in a slope at the entrance,” said Ducker. “The space is all tiled at the front, and they gradually fade towards the back where there are just a few clusters left.”

“We left some exposed brickwork because we wanted the one-tile-thick insertion to be noticeable,” he added.

Voodoo Rays by Gundry & Ducker

The tiles extend out and around the building’s entrance, branded with a red neon sign by graphic designers Studio Partyline.

Voodoo Ray’s is named after a 1988 acid house track by UK artist A Guy Called Gerald, who switched on the sign at the restaurant’s opening party.

Voodoo Rays by Gundry & Ducker

Gundry & Ducker‘s other projects in London include a sushi restaurant in Soho and a blackened larch house extension south of the city.

Photography is by Hufton + Crow.

See more architecture and design by Gundry & Ducker »
See more restaurant interiors »
See all our stories in London »

Here some further details from the architects:


Voodoo Rays is a late night pizza slice shop and restaurant in Dalston East London.

The design is intended to sit within, and celebrate its location on Kingsland High Street, a typical inner London high street strip with its ad-hoc signs and frontages. Its neon signage and brightly light interior is intended to be part of the nighttime street scene.

The design of all surfaces is formed predominately from coloured  6″ ceramic tiles. We wanted to form the interior as a sequence of volumes, reducing in scale and density to reveal the original building interior as you move towards the back of the shop. Each element is expressed in a different colour, the larger elements incorporating giant abstracted text.

Voodoo Rays by Gundry & Ducker

A long pizza counter runs the length of the shop and projects beyond the shop frontage, which is recessed, so that the counter feels like part of the street. A hidden door leads to a basement club.

The design is intended to have multiple references taken from both East London and New York, and from between the 1950s -1980s. The references range from launderettes to pie shops, to seaside amusement arcades all of which are reinterpreted with a cartoon sensibility.

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Urban Stories: Stonescape by Kengo Kuma

Milan 2013: bamboo trees sprouted up around a topographical landscape of stone and water at this installation created by Japanese architect Kengo Kuma in Milan last month.

Stonescape by Kengo Kuma

As one of three architect-designed installations for the Urban Stories exhibition of contemporary living, Kengo Kuma‘s Stonescape was designed as an interpretation of a traditional Japanese Zen garden.

Stonescape by Kengo Kuma

Cascading stone strata formed a series of undulating curves around the room. Pools of water formed at some of the lowest levels, while others contained clusters of bamboo trees planted in gravel.

Stonescape by Kengo Kuma

“The clean and pure Pietra Serena stone is used so as to recreate a topography that, as in real landscapes, moulds the shape of water, guides our walking and gives a context to the objects to better admire them,” says Kengo Kuma and Associates.

Stonescape by Kengo Kuma

The installation was located in one of the buildings of the Porta Nuova Varesine complex, a new skyscraper district designed by architects including Cesar Pelli, Stefano Boeri and Nicholas Grimshaw. It was used as a showroom for furniture between 9 and 14 April, alongside spaces designed by Michele de Lucchi and Diego Grandi.

Stonescape by Kengo Kuma

Other recent projects by Kengo Kuma include an experimental house in Japan and a fashion boutique in China. See more architecture by Kengo Kuma.

Stonescape by Kengo Kuma

See more projects from Milan 2013, including offices of the future imagined by Jean Nouvel and a courtyard installation of rotating cork platforms by the Bouroullecs.

Photography is by Giovanni Desandre, apart from otherwise stated.

Here’s some more information from the exhibition organisers:


In the spectacular skyline of Porta Nuova Varesine in Milan, on the occasion of the Fuorisalone collateral event, three exceptional architects are ‘staging’ three extraordinary suggestions of contemporary living.

Stonescape by Kengo Kuma
Photograph by Enrico Conti

Michele De Lucchi, Diego Grandi and Kengo Kuma, ‘tell’ their Urban Stories, through unique and thrilling installations, for an eagerly-awaited event, which supplements the busy schedule of Fuorisalone events.

Urban Stories, organised by MoscaPartners, with the collaboration of Hines, is a spin-off from the extraordinary success of Bologna Water Design 2012, the exclusive event dedicated to water design, which involved the city’s most prestigious venues during the Cersaie show in September.

Stonescape by Kengo Kuma
Photograph by Enrico Conti

The limelight is therefore cast on Urban Stories and its stars, who thanks to the enthusiastic participation of major leading companies in a variety of industries will give rise to charming captivating set-ups.

The focus of Urban Stories is the Porta Nuova Varesine complex, which is the result of an ambitious urban and architectural replanning project involving large areas of the Isola, Varesine and Garibaldi districts, developed and implemented by famous architects, including Cesar Pelli, Stefano Boeri and Nicholas Grimshaw, under the direction of Hines Italia Sgr, promoter and investor.

Stonescape by Kengo Kuma
Photograph by Enrico Conti

The original installations created by Michele De Lucchi, Diego Grandi and Kengo Kuma will transform the important display spaces of the ‘new centre of Milan’ into an exceptional cultural box, ready to welcome the curious multifarious public who animates the most important and eagerly-awaited international design event every year.

Urban Stories are therefore not just simple installations, but proper ‘seductions’, resulting from a sensitive way of designing to imagine the landscape within our cities and outside them.

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Markthuis by Barcode Architects

Dutch studio Barcode Architects has renovated a house in Belgium to make room to display a collection of hunting trophies.

Markthuis by Barcode Architects

Named Markthuis, the two-storey residence has been reconfigured to create a central atrium, helping to bring more daylight onto a double-height “exhibition wall” of paintings and antlers.

Markthuis by Barcode Architects

Barcode Architects replaced the original staircase with a freestanding wooden structure that folds back and forth through the atrium between clear-glass balustrades.

Markthuis by Barcode Architects

A frosted glass wall separates the staircase from the entrance lobby just in front, where a bearskin rug is spread across the floor.

Markthuis by Barcode Architects

Beyond the atrium, most of the original partitions have been removed to create a large open-plan space on both storeys. At ground-floor level, this room functions as reception room for entertaining guests, while the floor above is used as a general living and dining room.

Markthuis by Barcode Architects

“From any point in the villa there is a clear view out, to the sky and the green,” says Barcode Architects. “Combined with the ‘lofty’ floor plan, it delivers the house with a unique transparency and quality.”

Markthuis by Barcode Architects

Other recently completed house renovations include a converted stable block in England and an overhauled townhouse in the Netherlands. See more renovations on Dezeen.

Photography is by Christian van der Kooij.

Here’s some more information from Barcode Architects:


Barcode Architects ‘Markthuis’ is completed

Barcode Architects design for the extension and renovation of ‘Markthuis’ is completed. The design is driven by the desire to optimise the daylighting in the house and the wish of the client to reserve a prominent place for his large collection of art and hunting trophies.

Markthuis by Barcode Architects
Ground floor plan – click for larger image

In order to maximize the spatial experience most of the interior walls are removed to remain with one open living space extending over the first two floors of the villa. Downstairs are comfortable spaces for receiving guests while on the upper first floor more intimate and private areas with an open plan kitchen, study, and lounge area are situated.

Markthuis by Barcode Architects
First floor plan – click for larger image

A large atrium connects the two layers and provides space for an exclusive, double high exhibition wall with an impressive amount of artefacts. The wooden staircase is placed as a freestanding piece of furniture within the vide, on one side guided by a 6 meter tall piece of glass. The glazed element separates the kitchen and the entrance lobby from the rest of the house and offers exciting plays of light and shadow.

Markthuis by Barcode Architects
Long section – click for larger image

Notice: Barcode Architects
Location: Belgium
Stage: Realized
Client: Private
Area: 400 sqm

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Barcode Architects
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The Chalk Room by JamesPlumb

British design studio JamesPlumb has created a dimly lit showroom filled with antique furniture in the basement of east London menswear store Hostem (+ slideshow).

The Chalk Room by JamesPlumb
Photograph by Alex Duffner

Following their earlier refit of Hostem’s shop floor, James Russell and Hannah Plumb were asked to redesign the shop’s subterranean level to provide a quieter space for displaying the brand’s most important collections.

The Chalk Room by JamesPlumb
Photograph by Thomas Giddings

“We wanted the space to be different from upstairs: a discreet addition for the store’s most cherished goods,” Russell told Dezeen. “We opened the space up, painted it dark and dimmed the lighting; this created a calmness by making the corners and edges of walls disappear.”

The Chalk Room by JamesPlumb
Photograph by Thomas Giddings

The designers added a few unique furniture pieces for displaying different garments and accessories. These include a wardrobe that appears to be collapsing and a Chesterfield sofa with a table growing out of its centre.

The Chalk Room by JamesPlumb
Photograph by Alex Duffner

“Our work often starts with things we love that are broken and damaged,” explains Russell. “When we found the sofa it had no seat and was just this filthy rotten leather, but we didn’t want to just reupholster it into another Chesterfield, we wanted to celebrate it.”

The Chalk Room by JamesPlumb
Photograph by Alex Duffner

Other furniture pieces include a Wurlitzer harp case converted into a display case for a single garment and an old crate formerly used for the transportation of pigs. There’s also a fitting room, screened behind a thick layer of draped fabric.

The Chalk Room by JamesPlumb
Photograph by Thomas Giddings

The Chalk Room is currently dedicated to Hostem’s bespoke service, which provides made to measure clothing and accessories, but shoppers can also order furniture by JamesPlumb. This includes chests of drawers made from stacks of suitcases and chandeliers made from clusters of antique lampshades.

The Chalk Room by JamesPlumb
Photograph by Alex Duffner

JamesPlumb designed the original interior for Hostem in 2010. The project won the retail category at the inaugural Inside awards and Dezeen interviewed Russell and Plumb about their design as part of the event.

The Chalk Room by JamesPlumb
Photograph by Thomas Giddings

See more design by JamesPlumb, including the brand’s most recent collection.

The Chalk Room by JamesPlumb
Photograph by Alex Duffner

Here are a few words from JamesPlumb:


The Chalk Room by JamesPlumb
Bespoke Menswear Store Redchurch Street, London

JAMESPLUMB created this discreet addition to their award winning interior design for menswear store Hostem in East London.

The Chalk Room by JamesPlumb
Photograph by Alex Duffner

Briefed to create an environment to celebrate the craft and skill of the store’s most cherished designers, they created a quietly removed space, downstairs from the main showroom.

The Chalk Room by JamesPlumb
Photograph by Thomas Giddings

A brand new collection of one off assemblage form the perfect theatrical showcase – including an antique Wurlitzer harp case transformed into a wardrobe for a single garment, a weather worn Chesterfield married with a table, and a crate formerly used for carrying pedigree pigs, that now presents handmade footwear.

The Chalk Room by JamesPlumb
Photograph by Thomas Giddings

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by JamesPlumb
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Bagatti Valsecchi 2.0 exhibition by Rossana Orlandi

Milan 2013: Rossana Orlandi curated an exhibition of work by designers including Nacho Carbonell, Front and Studio Libertiny at the Bagatti Valsecchi Museum in Milan.

Bagatti Valsecchi 2point0 exhibition by Rossana Orlandi
Pump It Up by Nacho Carbonell

Spanish designer Carbonell hung loops of silicone tubing from metalwork angled at 45 degrees then filled them with blue LED lights, creating a chandelier commissioned by fashion brand Vionnet (top).

Bagatti Valsecchi 2point0 exhibition by Rossana Orlandi
Medium Memoralia by Nacho Carbonell

He also exhibited a chair with wings of steel cubes and marble sculptures that resemble cat-giraffe hybrids.

Bagatti Valsecchi 2point0 exhibition by Rossana Orlandi
Gattogirafa by Nacho Carbonell

Among the 15 other artists and studios that presented work, JamesPlumb contributed a sofa with a cast concrete seat and Maarten Baas showed his purposefully inaccurate time-keeping device for Laikingland.

Bagatti Valsecchi 2point0 exhibition by Rossana Orlandi
Just About Now by Maarten Baas for Laikingland

A cabinet shaped by a mathematical calculation to absorb noises by Dirk Vander Kooij and a yellow mobile prototype lamp from Front’s lastest collection were also on display.

Bagatti Valsecchi 2point0 exhibition by Rossana Orlandi
Yellow Mobile by Front

Open for Milan’s design week earlier this month, the exhibition was located in the Bagatti Valsecchi Museum – a 19th century family house converted into a museum to preserve its interiors and display the family’s decorative arts collection.

Bagatti Valsecchi 2point0 exhibition by Rossana Orlandi
Bagatti Valsecchi Design Shop by CLS Architetti

A small wire-mesh house designed by Italian studio CLS Architetti was constructed underneath the grand staircase to host the museum’s shop, also curated by Orlandi.

Bagatti Valsecchi 2point0 exhibition by Rossana Orlandi
Diffuser Cabinet by Dirk Vander Kooij

Elsewhere in Milan, Moooi presented their new collection among giant portraits and Jean Nouvel has set out his vision for the office environments of the future.

Bagatti Valsecchi 2point0 exhibition by Rossana Orlandi
Golden Calf Armoire by Desiree Von Pelt

See all our coverage of Milan 2013 »
See more architecture and design exhibitions »

Here’s the press release from the museum:


2.0 an Exhibition at the Bagatti Valsecchi Museum – Milan

Two Landlords and two Ladies, plus a magnificent Mansion have created an exhibition that opens up a dialogue between past and present trends.

Bagatti Valsecchi 2point0 exhibition by Rossana Orlandi
Desk, chair and printer table by Enrico Marone Cinzano

Like one would do with a flower composition, 16 artists display their pieces in an untouched environment of blissful past beauty developed over the centuries by a generous family who later wished to share their home with everyone.

Bagatti Valsecchi 2point0 exhibition by Rossana Orlandi
Medium Mobile by Nacho Carbonell

Fausto and Giuseppe Bagatti Valsecchi, together with patroness Goga Ashkenazi and Rossana Orlandi who provided the creative inspiration for it, are celebrating a new interpretation of a red thread bridging the Past with the Contemporary spirit.

Bagatti Valsecchi 2point0 exhibition by Rossana Orlandi
Bust Chair (left) and Martha Hertford Vase (right) by Tomas Libertiny

From Home to Home, the endless and timeless journey of artworks and exquisite pieces that are made to last is marked by a softly inspirational beginning, as Rossana Orlandi did it, almost silently and cosily placing 14 chairs into the rooms of the Museum for the watchmen to rest and proving that beautiful objects never clash but rather nurture each other. Nacho Carbonell’s magnificent Chandelier inspired by Maison Vionnet is one of the multi-faceted interpretations of the concept of mixing forty-five degrees and blue.

Bagatti Valsecchi 2point0 exhibition by Rossana Orlandi
Transmission Lamp by Studio DeForm

The rooms host artworks from Front Design, Studio Deform, Paul Heijnen, Niels Hoebers, Tomas Libertiny, Yukiko Nagai, Frederique Morrel, Dirk Vander Kooij, Maarten Baas, Martin Smith, President Von Pelt, Enrico Marone Cinzano, Massimiliano Locatelli Cls Architetti, Manuela Crotti and Giampiero Milella.

Bagatti Valsecchi 2point0 exhibition by Rossana Orlandi
Stop Motion Video by Niels Hoebers

A rejuvenating feeling around a family museum and the beginning of a passionate endeavour.

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by Rossana Orlandi
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Home 09 by i29

Dutch interiors studio i29 has added plywood walls, furniture and surfaces to every room inside this house in North Holland (+ slideshow).

Home 09 by i29

Located near the Kennemer dunes on the west coast, Villa Bloemendaal is a two-storey residence completed by Dutch firm Paul de Ruiter Architects in 2011. i29‘s role was to detail the interiors of each room, using a minimal approach and simple materials.

Home 09 by i29

The designers used plywood throughout the house to unite each of the different spaces. In the living room, the material was used to construct a fireplace, while plywood bookshelves line the walls of the kitchen and dining room, and plywood cabinets, wardrobes and beds can be found in the bedrooms.

Home 09 by i29

Jeroen Dellensen of i29 told Dezeen: “The villa has large expanses of glass, which results in lots of light and gives the inhabitants the feeling that the villa and the surrounding landscape are one. To bring nature inside even more, we decided to use a natural material on walls, cabinets and sliding doors.”

Home 09 by i29

To complement the natural finish of the wood, the architects added black and white furniture and light fittings.

Home 09 by i29

“A monochrome colour palette is something we use often in our work, in order to give selected interior elements more character,” added Dellensen.

Home 09 by i29

House 09 follow a sequence of numerically titled residential interiors by i29. Others include Home 06, which featured a wall of plants, and Home 08, where appliances are hidden inside timber cabinets. See more interiors by i29.

Home 09 by i29

Other recently completed houses in the Netherlands include a renovated townhouse in The Hague and a thatched residence in Zoetermeer. See more Dutch houses on Dezeen.

Home 09 by i29

Photography is by the architects.

Home 09 by i29

Here’s some more information from i29:


Close to Bloemendaal, on the edge of the Kennemer dunes, the site of Villa Bloemendaal is situated. A sustainable home that follows a minimalistic design and shows respect for man and nature alike, in a unique residential area where the existing flora and fauna are given full rein.

Home 09 by i29

i29 interior architects worked on the interior of a villa which was designed by Paul de Ruiter architects. A minimal approach to the materialisation and detailing of the building is a core value of both the interior and exterior design. The large expanses of glass and the patio result in maximum daylighting and give the inhabitants the feeling that the villa and the surrounding landscape are one.

Home 09 by i29

In order to bring nature inside even more, all of the interior functions in the house are made from natural materials. i29 interior architects created large surfaces of wood through the whole house to connect the different areas. Cabinets, wardrobes, walls, sliding doors, beds and even a fireplace have been made in one and the same material. Pine wood panels – normally a basic material – has been used as a high end finishing with fine details.

Home 09 by i29

Client: Private
Location: Bloemendaal NL
Floor area: 489 sqm

Home 09 by i29

Architect: Paul de Ruiter architects
Interior architect: i29 interior architects
Contractor: Scholz Groep – IJmuiden
Cabinet maker: Kastwerk
Materials: pine wood panelling, steel, concrete floor, glass walls, linoleum, painted wood

Home 09 by i29
Ground floor plan – click for larger image
Home 09 by i29
First floor plan – click for larger image

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by i29
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The Island Kitchen Is Finally Here

Space crunch + kitchen has always equalled to a compromised kitchen. Realistically speaking, designer Massimo Facchinetti has nailed it with his Ecooking vertical kitchen. This single module kitchen is a hub for sustainable cooking. The technologies of the project highlight energy-saving systems, and come integrated with an internal retrieval of energy system. This is achieved thanks to the close proximity and interaction of appliances with each other and the exchange of heat and moisture.

  • The electrical elements of the kitchen are powered by the energy produced by solar panels.
  • On one side of the kitchen module there is placed a small vertical garden, which allows the cultivation of aromatic plants for daily use.
  • The water coming from the sink is filtered and reused in the dishwasher; then undergoes a second filtering process and is used to water the plants in the vertical greenhouse.
  • A retractable tap that disappears into the sink.
  • Large refrigerator, an integrated cooking system (induction hob and microwave), systems for rinsing and washing (sink and dishwasher with adequate capacity).
  • The rotating hood contains a light that follows you while operating around the column and softens in different shades at lunchtime and when using the extractable tables.
  • In the hood the air treatment system, based on nanomaterials of titanium dioxide, it purifies the ambient air and is capable of purifying a medium sized room in a few hours.

Designer: Massimo Facchinetti for CLEI


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(The Island Kitchen Is Finally Here was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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