Complete interior plan with a dark island kitchen and custom storage
The island sets the tone straight away: dark fronts, a stone-look top, and a wood detail that lifts the slab so it appears to float above the base. Around it, the kitchen reads as one continuous line of cabinetry rather than a series of separate units. The complete interior plan with custom kitchen and built-in storage carries that same discipline into the rest of the house, where each room gets its own fixed place in the layout.
A kitchen built around one clear centre
The dark island kitchen is the most visible piece in the plan. It has a bar area on one side, enough depth for daily use, and a ceramic worktop with a mineral surface that catches the light differently from the matte fronts below. Above the work zone, linear kitchen lighting runs in a straight line and keeps the counter legible. The result is less about display and more about a surface that works from breakfast through to evening prep.
Along the wall, custom kitchen cabinetry brings in the storage that keeps the room visually calm. Tall units hold appliances in a clean stack, while open niches break up the darker surfaces and create room for objects that need to be within reach. The cabinet line stays tight, with handle details kept restrained so the eye moves from one plane to the next without interruption. In a room this open, that matters more than ornament.
Stone, wood, and a countertop that seems to hover
The strongest detail sits at the island edge. A wooden element supports the ceramic top and gives the whole block a lighter reading, as if the worktop is suspended above the base. That same nut-toned timber returns in the bathroom vanity and the toilet unit, so the material language does not stop at the kitchen. It reappears in smaller, quieter places where a hand reaches for storage or a basin.
Seen from the side, the kitchen gains depth from contrast rather than colour. Dark fronts absorb the room, the stone-like surface reflects a softer sheen, and the wood line breaks the mass just enough to sharpen the profile. The island bar projects into the space without feeling bulky. It gives the kitchen a clear social edge while preserving the practical working zone behind it.
Storage that follows the day-to-day route
The utility room extends the same interior logic into a more work-driven setting. Here the emphasis is on storage volume and on details that make routine tasks easier to manage. The cabinetry is built to hold what should stay out of sight, and the layout keeps the reach from one zone to the next short. Nothing tries to compete with the kitchen island; it simply handles the overflow that a family home collects over time.
That approach continues in the sitting area, where a custom TV unit anchors the wall without taking over the room. The unit uses recessed sections and built-in storage to keep cables, screens, and smaller items visually contained. In the photos, the wall reads as a measured composition of dark grey lines and open sections rather than a standard media cabinet. Nearby, the rail-mounted spotlights keep the seating area bright enough for reading while avoiding glare on the artwork and the glazed openings.
An entrance with storage built into the first view
At the entrance, a wardrobe turns a practical need into part of the route through the house. The tall cabinet sits close to the door line and makes use of the wall depth without crowding the passage. Its position matters: coats and daily items have a fixed landing place before the eye moves further inside. The same built-in approach returns in the bedroom wardrobes, which extend the storage strategy into the private rooms without changing the overall language of straight fronts and controlled proportions.
Black-framed glass doors and window sections bring another layer into the plan. They cut across the interior with sharp verticals and help define the transitions between entrance, hall, and living spaces. The dark frames echo the kitchen fronts, so the house keeps a consistent line even as the functions change. Light travels across the floor and walls in clean strips, catching the edges of the built-ins and the ceiling details rather than filling the rooms with decorative noise.
The bathroom follows the same material logic
The bathroom shifts the palette, but not the discipline. A marble-look bathroom wall gives the sink zone a patterned backdrop, with grey veining that reads clearly around the mirror and basin area. In front of it sits a wood-look bathroom vanity, longer in proportion and fitted with a double sink. The basin layout gives two users their own side, while the timber finish softens the harder tone of the tiled wall behind it.
Close up, the vanity shows how the materials are kept separate instead of blended together. Dark taps sit against the lighter basins, and the cabinet front holds the wood grain in a flat, horizontal run. The bathroom with double sink is lit by small ceiling fixtures that pick out the edges of the furniture rather than washing over everything at once. That controlled light makes the vanity wall easy to read and keeps the room from flattening into one surface.
The toilet room repeats the walnut tone on a smaller scale. It is a brief space, but the material carry-through gives it the same visual register as the main bathroom and the kitchen island. That repetition is what ties the complete interior plan together: not a single dominant gesture, but a sequence of related pieces. Kitchen, utility room, entry storage, wardrobe walls, basin furniture, and the TV unit all follow the same measured language of dark planes, wood inserts, and stone-like surfaces.
What remains after moving through the house is the sense of a plan built from fixed elements rather than add-ons. The complete interior plan with custom kitchen and built-in storage uses the same restraint in every room: straight lines, practical cabinet volumes, and materials that repeat in slightly different scales. The kitchen carries the strongest contrast, while the bathroom and built-ins translate it into quieter details. Together they form a house where storage, circulation, and furniture are treated as one continuous interior system.
Photography: Marieke van Velthuizen
Materials and suppliers mentioned in the source: furniture supplier MadeByDas, ceramic worktop by Velthuizen Select, and appliances and fittings by Quooker, Siemens, BORA, Liebherr, and Miele.
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