Paul Theuws Interieur

Luxury total interior with a custom kitchen, wall cabinets and warm integrated lighting

The first thing you notice is the stone: a broad countertop with pronounced veining that cuts across the kitchen like a line drawing. Around it, dark cabinetry and pale textiles set up a measured contrast, while ceiling spots pick out edges, openings and reflections. The result is a luxury interior design scheme that depends less on ornament than on proportion, light and the way each surface meets the next.

luxury interior design as the architectural starting point

The kitchen sits at the centre of the composition, with a rectangular island and bar-like extension that give the room a clear gathering point. Cabinet fronts rise to the ceiling, pulling the eye upward and keeping storage visually contained. The luxury fitted kitchen is defined by its surfaces: stone, structured wood tones and darker panels that hold the frame together without competing for attention. Here, custom interior built-ins are not separate pieces but part of the room’s architecture.

Across the island and surrounding run, the stone countertop with distinctive veining becomes the main visual thread. Its mottled pattern introduces movement into an otherwise strict layout. In one view, the polished edge catches the light; in another, the darker grain of the material reads almost like a seam through the kitchen block. That detail matters, because the whole space is built on this kind of close-up material control rather than on broad decorative gestures.

Wall cabinets with LED niches and clear lines

One of the strongest gestures in the project is the long wall of cabinetry. The fronts are aligned in a restrained grid, but the rhythm shifts where open niches interrupt the closed storage. These wall cabinets with LED niches create depth without breaking the calm of the wall. The light sits low and horizontal, tracing shelves and recesses so the openings read as part of the storage system rather than as add-ons.

The warm integrated lighting changes how the cabinetry feels in the room. It does not flood the space; it marks out specific zones, from open compartments to display shelves and the bar area. The glow also softens the darker wood structure panels, making their grain easier to read. In a project this controlled, light is doing more than illuminating. It is shaping the cadence of the interior and guiding the view from one built-in to the next.

Open compartments, glass accents and the bar area

Open compartments appear in several parts of the wall joinery, sometimes backed by a dark surface, sometimes paired with glass accents that catch a faint reflection. Near the bar cabinet, the composition becomes more layered: stacked shelves, concealed storage and slim openings sit together in one block. Ceiling spots above this zone add a second layer of light, lifting the upper edges and keeping the whole arrangement legible in the evening.

This is where open-plan living storage becomes visible as an organising tool. The bar zone is not isolated from the rest of the room; it sits within the larger interior as a functional pause between kitchen and living area. The layout uses height, shadow and repeated verticals to hold that transition in place. Even the round upholstered seating nearby follows the same logic, bringing a softer shape into a room dominated by straight runs and right angles. That makes the luxury interior design part of the architectural character rather than a loose finish.

Warm light across the living area

In the living space, the ceiling spots work with a broader ambient glow to pick out curtains, panel joints and the edges of recessed wall elements. Beige drapery filters the large window opening and breaks the harder lines of the cabinetry. The room keeps its structure, but the textiles take the edge off the darker wood and stone. That contrast between solid built-ins and lighter fabric surfaces gives the interior its most readable tension.

From one angle, the living area reads as a continuous room with long sightlines. From another, it becomes a series of zones, each marked by light, material or a change in depth. The open-plan living storage keeps the visual field orderly, while the warm integrated lighting gives each recessed shelf and niche a clear edge. Nothing here feels overdesigned. The interest comes from repeated precision: a line of light, a cut-out shelf, a stone plane, a curtain folded beside the window.

Materials that carry the detail

Structured wood panels, glass and stone do most of the work. The wood has a fine linear grain that reads well beside the smoother, reflective finish of the countertop and the darker cabinet fronts. In close-up, the materials look almost architectural: the stone’s veining, the sharp corner of a panel, the slim reveal between two surfaces. High-end materials and finishes in this interior are less about display than about how surfaces hold a clean edge under light.

Detail photographs make that point clearly. A stone surface with a strong pattern sits next to textile upholstery with a thicker weave, and the shift in texture is immediate. Another image shows a glossy stone panel meeting darker timber-like cladding at a precise junction. These are small moments, but they carry the project. They explain why the room feels consistent even as it moves from kitchen block to display wall to living area.

A complete interior built from aligned pieces

The overall impression is of one continuous interior assembled from carefully related parts. The custom interior built-ins set the structure, the luxury fitted kitchen supplies the centre, and the lighting threads through both. Large window openings and neutral curtains prevent the darker elements from becoming heavy, while the stone and glass details keep the surfaces active. It is a room that depends on exact placement: where the light lands, how a shelf recesses, how the countertop edge meets the cabinet below.

Photography by Thomas Bakker captures these shifts in scale and surface, from the long wall of storage to the close crop of the veined stone. The project credits also mention a kitchen countertop and bronze glass supplied by collaborators, which aligns with the visible material contrast in the images. Taken together, the rooms read as a carefully composed luxury interior design project in which storage, kitchen worktop, illumination and living space all carry the same clear visual language.

Further reading: custom interior built-ins, luxury fitted kitchen, wall cabinets with LED niches, interior lighting in built-in joinery, and stone and structured surfaces. That makes the luxury interior design part of the architectural character rather than a loose finish.

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Luxury, Design, Exclusive, Modern, Custom Made, Special, Beautiful
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Luxury, Design, Exclusive, Modern, Custom Made, Special, Beautiful
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NEW 2026 Jubileum Edition The Best Interior Designers Benelux

Uniquely Numbered • Anniversary Edition • Limited
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Luxury, Design, Exclusive, Modern, Custom Made, Special, Beautiful
Luxury, Design, Exclusive, Modern, Custom Made, Special, Beautiful
Pre sale

NEW 2026 Jubileum Edition The Best Interior Designers Benelux

Uniquely Numbered • Anniversary Edition • Limited
Order Now
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