Luxury apartment interior with custom detailing
Wood slats run across the living room wall and frame the television in one clean sweep. The surface breaks only for a recessed niche, so the screen sits back instead of floating forward. Below it, a low cabinet follows the line of the wall, while full-height curtains soften the edge of the window. The result is a luxury apartment interior that relies on joinery, texture, and restraint rather than display.
Warm materials, kept close to the surface
Across the apartment, the material palette stays close to the ground: leather, natural stone, and brass details appear in measured places, not as accents competing for attention. Sand-coloured sprayed finishes extend that calm tone onto larger wall surfaces, so the rooms read as one sequence even when the functions change. The custom interior design is visible in the way each element is cut to fit its setting, from the cabinet fronts to the wall returns and thresholds.
That attention to finish gives the rooms a steady rhythm. In the hallway, built-in cabinets line the wall and pull storage out of the circulation path. Their flush fronts keep the passage clear, while the long perspective draws the eye toward the rooms beyond. The wood floor adds a second horizontal line underfoot, which makes the built-in cabinetry feel anchored rather than added later. It is a practical move, but it also shapes how the apartment is read.
A wood slat wall that does more than frame the screen
The wood slat wall is one of the strongest elements in the project because it carries both structure and atmosphere. Its vertical rhythm breaks up the broad wall plane and gives the living area a warmer grain without adding clutter. The television sits in a recessed opening, and the slats continue around it so the screen reads as part of the composition. Nearby, the curtains and pale floor keep the focus on texture rather than contrast.
A curved wall detail appears further along in the apartment, where a glazed opening with a black frame interrupts the softer surfaces. The edge is sharp, almost architectural, and it sets off the more tactile finishes around it. That shift from rounded plaster-like form to dark glass frame gives the custom interior design a measured tension. Nothing is overdrawn. The materials do the work through surface, depth, and the way light lands on each plane.
Storage integrated into the route
Storage is handled as part of the route, not as an afterthought. In the long corridor, built-in cabinets lighting is used sparingly to pick out niches and open sections, so the wall becomes more than a plain storage run. Some areas are closed and flush; others open into display or utility zones. This mix gives the apartment a practical backbone, but the real effect is visual. The wall reads as one continuous piece of joinery with pauses for use and light.
Natural stone surfaces in kitchen and bathroom
The kitchen island natural stone surface is the clearest sign of the apartment’s material direction. The stone top runs across the island in a single slab-like plane, while darker fronts below keep the composition grounded. Open shelves and a niche in the wall add depth behind the work zone, and the built-in appliances sit quietly within the cabinetry. The kitchen does not rely on contrast for effect; instead, it uses proportion and surface thickness to hold the room together.
That same stone language continues in the bathroom, where a double vanity carries a natural stone top beneath two basins. The basin wall is cut with a round mirror detail, which softens the straight lines of the vanity and the adjacent joinery. Wood-toned plinths and surrounding surfaces keep the room from feeling hard, while the stone itself gives the space its weight. It is a bathroom defined by edges, openings, and the way reflections meet matte surfaces.
Brass details against a muted palette
Brass accent details appear in small, deliberate places, catching the light without taking over the room. Against the sand, cream, and brown tones, the metal reads as a warm line rather than a shine. That restraint matters here. The apartment already has strong material presence through wood, stone, and leather, so the metal works best when it sharpens a handle, outlines a frame, or marks the edge of a niche. It gives the eye something precise to follow.
In the dressing room, mirrored cabinet fronts extend the sense of depth and double the light from the overhead strips. A central seat sits within the passage, making the room feel organised around movement and reflection. The lit verticals on either side turn storage into a visible part of the interior rather than something hidden behind doors. Elsewhere, a glass display cabinet with dark framing introduces another layer of transparency, letting objects sit behind glass instead of on open shelves.
Bedrooms kept quiet by material and light
The bedrooms stay close to the same language of built-in surfaces and soft edges. In one room, the bed sits within a wall composition with recessed cabinetry and a large black-framed window beside it. Curtain fabric falls in long folds, covering most of the opening and lowering the contrast in the room. Ceiling spotlights are set into the plain surface above, so the light source remains discreet. The room reads less as a decorated setting than as a carefully built enclosure.
Another detail shows a small niche with a wooden border and a pendant light hovering above it. The opening is modest, but it gives the wall a clear pause and introduces another layer of depth. Even the close-up images of the joinery matter here: a long handle, a dark insert, the grain in the wood, the edge where one finish meets another. These are the points where the apartment’s custom interior design becomes most legible.
Seen as a whole, the apartment keeps returning to the same set of moves: wall surfaces that carry storage, light that marks openings, and materials that stay tactile rather than glossy. That is what gives the luxury apartment interior its tone. The rooms are not overloaded with features. They are built from precise decisions about where a cabinet stops, where a niche begins, and how natural stone, wood, and brass share the frame.
Want to see more of SANT Interiors? View the page of SANT Interiors for even more great projects and company information.








