Home renovation with an exclusive, modern luxury interior
Marble catches the light first, then the wood fineer settles the room with a softer grain. In this home renovation, the palette stays restrained: white, beige, brown and black, with large panes of glass opening the kitchen and dining area to daylight. The result is not driven by decoration, but by surfaces and edges. A marble island, a vertical wood slat wall, and dark cabinet fronts set the tone for the rest of the interior.
A kitchen built around stone and wood
The kitchen is the clearest expression of the modern luxury kitchen in this project. A marble island with visible dark veining sits against darker cabinetry, so the stone reads almost like a block set into the room. Next to it, the vertical wood slat wall introduces rhythm without breaking the calm surface of the space. The contrast is direct: cool stone, warm wood, and black details that keep the composition sharp.
Large glazing beside the kitchen and dining zone lets the daylight run across those materials. The light lifts the marble and softens the darker fronts, while the rail of linear lighting above the dining table adds a second layer after sunset. In close-up, the kitchen detail image shows a darker front with a marble-look top panel, again using only a few materials to do a lot of visual work. It is a precise approach, not a crowded one.
Marble as a continuous surface
The marble-look kitchen island is not treated as an accent only. It connects visually to the bathroom surfaces later in the house, where the same stone effect returns in wall tile, vanity top and shower surround. That repetition gives the interior a clear material language. Even when the room changes, the eye still recognizes the same pale veining and the same preference for crisp lines over ornament.
The dining area extends that language with a long table and a slim light rail. Nothing interrupts the view across the room, so the table reads as part of the architecture rather than a separate object. The surrounding glazing keeps the space open and bright, and the dark edge details stop the pale finishes from dissolving into one another. That tension is what gives the room its definition.
Rooms that keep the material story going
The bedroom shifts the mood without leaving the project’s visual logic behind. Upholstered wall panels form a soft backdrop, and the patterned curtains add a graphic layer beside the window. It is a quieter room, but the geometry is still controlled. The panel seams line up cleanly, and the dark ceiling light gives the room a clearer outline against the lighter walls and fabric.
In the living room, the vertical wood slat wall returns with more presence. Here it frames a black built-in fireplace opening, turning that wall into a single strong composition. The fireplace sits as a dark recess rather than a decorative object, which makes the wood texture around it stand out even more. A glass opening nearby brings daylight into the room and keeps the wall from feeling heavy.
A built-in fireplace set into the wall
The modern living room built-in fireplace is handled as a cut-out within the wall rather than a separate mantel feature. That approach suits the rest of the house, where edges are clean and the surfaces do most of the talking. The black frame around the opening gives the wall a graphic line, and the slatted timber beside it breaks up the plane in a controlled way. It is a room that works with depth, not excess.
The drinks corner adds a smaller, more intimate moment. Dark wood cladding wraps the wall, while the marble table top introduces a lighter surface against it. Seen together, the two materials create a compact composition that echoes the kitchen: stone on one side, timber on the other. The scale is different, but the logic remains the same, and that consistency gives the home renovation a readable sequence from space to space.
A bathroom shaped by marble-look tile and glass
The luxury marble-look bathroom is one of the strongest material scenes in the project. Pale marble-look walls and tiles cover the space in a way that makes the room feel continuous, while the glass shower screen with black frames cuts a clear line through it. The dark profiles matter here. They sharpen the transparency of the glass and keep the pale stone pattern from becoming too soft or decorative.
Several bathroom details show how closely the finishes have been considered. A round, arched tap sits above a marble-look vanity surface, and another close-up shows a rose-gold tap set against the same pale veining. These are small elements, but they give the room a tighter visual cadence. The vanity surfaces, wall tiles and shower zone all share the same material family, which keeps the room legible from different angles.
The shower area uses the same contrast in a more direct way. A glass shower screen with black frames sits against marble-look tilework, so the division between open and enclosed stays visible. Rather than hiding that transition, the design emphasizes it. The effect is clean and practical in the visual sense: the geometry of the shower reads clearly, and the surrounding surfaces remain calm.
Steps, panels and the route between levels
The wooden staircase modern steps continue the project’s preference for straight lines and visible grain. Wide treads and wood veneer give the staircase a grounded appearance, while the adjacent vertical wood panels keep the composition aligned with the slat wall used elsewhere. The staircase is not isolated from the rest of the house; it belongs to the same family of finishes, only translated into a more architectural route between levels.
What stands out is the way the materials change scale. A slatted wall can read as texture in one room and as structure in another. A marble-look surface can sit quietly on a vanity or take command as a kitchen island. Across the house, the home renovation relies on that shift in scale rather than on variety for its own sake. Each room keeps the same measured palette, then uses light, framing and proportion to make the surfaces work harder.
Seen as a whole, the interior is defined by restraint in color and precision in detail. The glazing brings daylight deep into the kitchen and dining area, the black frames outline the bathroom and fireplace, and the wood veneer ties the staircase, slat wall and darker corner details together. Nothing here tries to compete for attention. Instead, the rooms are organized around material contrasts that remain visible from one space to the next.
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