Custom interior for a historic manor house
Dark wood cabinets set the tone as soon as you enter, with stone-like worktops, round pendant lights and a window wall pulling daylight across the room. The kitchen reads as the anchor of the custom interior, but the eye keeps moving into the adjacent spaces, where built-in storage, layered textures and darker wall finishes continue the same measured language.
A kitchen framed by light, stone and timber
The kitchen is built around strong, clean lines. Dark fronts run in a continuous band beneath a pale work surface, while the hanging lamps sit low enough to register against the room without crowding it. A second kitchen moment appears in the images as well: one with red-toned cabinetry, glass inserts and a more graphic wall surface, showing how the house allows different moods without losing its custom-made character. In both spaces, the joinery is doing the heavy lifting.
What stands out most is the way the cabinetry meets the windows. Light lands on the worktops, then slides across the cabinet faces and the metal details of the fixtures. The result is not decorative for its own sake; it is a room that handles daily use with visual precision. This is where the idea of a custom manor house interior becomes legible: fitted elements, careful proportions and materials that can hold their own in a large, historic setting.
Built-in cabinets with lighting in the living areas
Open shelving, closed storage and small integrated light points give the built-in cabinets with lighting a quieter role in the living spaces. One wall is broken by open niches and vertical slats, another turns into a long storage run beneath a recessed bench, and elsewhere a timber media wall includes a television opening and a grid of spotlights above. These pieces are not treated as add-ons. They organize the room, define the seating zone and keep the visual line calm even when the plan shifts from living to working.
In the main sitting area, dark upholstery, a blocky wooden coffee table and wide curtains sit under generous windows. The furniture is deliberately grounded, which lets the architecture do its work. A nearby desk and book storage area extend that same idea into a more practical corner of the house. The living room built-in wall keeps the room from feeling fragmented; it collects screens, books and storage into one surface that reads clearly from across the room.
Daily spaces with a slower rhythm
The dining zone sits close to the kitchen and shares the same visual restraint. Round pendant lights drop above the table, echoing the softer curves seen in the bathrooms and breaking up the straight edges of the joinery. Behind the table, large windows and layered curtains bring depth to the room. The floor finishes, timber tones and dark textiles keep the sequence grounded, while the transition between cooking, dining and sitting stays open enough for the family use described in the source material.
Materials that stay close to the surface
Throughout the house, the most noticeable move is the refusal to overstate anything. Timber appears in cabinetry, flooring, stair treads and table tops. Glass shows up in windows, shower enclosures and balustrade details. Stone and tile surfaces appear in the bathrooms and on the kitchen worktops. Even the darker walls are treated as material surfaces rather than background color, with patterned wallpaper and textured finishes adding depth in the bedrooms and transitional spaces. The house relies on that repetition to connect room to room.
The staircase makes that logic visible in motion. Broad wooden treads rise beside a slim glass-and-cable railing, so the structure feels open without becoming visually thin. Light from the upper level lands on the stair run and the surrounding white walls, sharpening the contrast between the timber and the pale plaster. It is a small sequence, but it tells the same story as the rest of the luxury home interior: fitted pieces, readable materials and a layout that respects how people move through the house.
Bathrooms set with mirrors, tile and double basins
The bathrooms shift the palette, but not the discipline. One room centers on a double vanity bathroom with paired basins, round mirrors and a stone-like counter that stretches cleanly beneath them. Another uses larger tile surfaces and a glass shower enclosure to keep the room legible from the doorway. In one image, a patterned wall brings a sharper note; in another, a coloured wall and reflective surfaces create a more enclosed feeling. These rooms are small compared with the living spaces, yet they carry the same fitted clarity.
Details that hold the room together
Lighting is kept low and precise in these private rooms. Mirror edges catch the glow, the basins sit neatly within the cabinet line, and the shower glass disappears just enough to let the tile work remain visible. Nothing here is left floating. The cabinetry, the taps and the wall finishes are aligned so the room reads in planes. That approach also links back to the main house, where storage and structure are always part of the surface rather than hidden behind decorative layers.
A covered outdoor kitchen tied to the house
Outside, the covered outdoor kitchen continues the interior vocabulary in a more sheltered setting. Brickwork, white columns and a roofed structure frame the cooking area, so it feels connected to the house rather than separated from it. The image shows an exterior room with enough enclosure to be used comfortably, but still open enough to relate to the garden edge. As an extension of the custom manor house interior, it carries the same preference for fixed elements, practical surfaces and a clear architectural outline.
What makes the project convincing is the consistency between the rooms. The dark wood custom kitchen, the illuminated storage walls, the stair detail, the bathrooms and the covered outdoor kitchen all speak the same design language. The historic setting described in the source text gives the house its frame, but the interior work is what turns the place into a family house. Large windows, fitted joinery and carefully chosen finishes give each room a role, while the whole sequence stays easy to read from one space to the next.
The project credits mention Boreas interieurbouw and Aannemingsbedrijf J. van der Windt as suppliers/materials, which fits the level of detailing seen throughout the images. From the kitchen fronts to the built-in walls and the bathroom cabinetry, the house depends on accurate joinery and disciplined assembly. That is where the custom manor house interior becomes most convincing: in the edges, the recesses, the light points and the way every room continues the one before it.
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