Brooklyn
The living area is anchored by full-height brickwork, with low-slung furniture and warm timber tones creating a grounded composition. Track lighting draws focus to art and books, while the matte palette holds the space in quiet cohesion. In the hallway, arched doorways and continued timber flooring soften the transition between zones. A single artwork and minimal lighting reframe the corridor as a moment of spatial pause.
The kitchen introduces a deeper register to the home’s palette, anchored by matte black cabinetry and hand-pressed tiles that absorb and scatter light with subtle irregularity. A suspended rack reinforces its working rhythm, balanced by aged brass hardware and softened detailing. This cast-iron rack, with its overhead display of pots and pans, doubles up as a centrepiece overhanging the peninsula.
The bedroom introduces deeper tones — slate-toned wardrobes, a timber bed frame, and muted textiles. The room is composed for retreat, consistent in tone and still in mood. A full-height wardrobe in light oak sits flush with the wall, softened by open shelving carved into its edge. The adjacent built-in retains the same clean lines and shadow gaps found throughout the flat. In contrast, the bathroom shifts tonally — wrapped in deep green glazed tiles, with a vertically stacked format that emphasises height. A dark stone vanity and matte black fixtures ground the palette, while softened lighting allows the room to feel enclosed but not compressed.
This cast-iron rack, with its overhead display of pots and pans, doubles up as a centrepiece overhanging the peninsula.
The bathroom is wrapped in deep green glazed tiles, with a vertically stacked format that emphasises height.
Holland Close
1070 sqft / 99 sqm