Luxury villa renovation with modern interior and garden
A band of stained glass at the entrance still breaks the first view of the house. It is a small detail, but it sets the tone for the entire luxury villa renovation: original character is not erased here, it is folded into a complete home renovation that moves toward darker finishes, sharp lines and generous openings to the garden.
Stained glass at the entrance, then a different pace inside
The entrance keeps its lead role through the preserved stained glass entrance window, while the interior shifts quickly into a calmer and more contemporary register. Large windows draw daylight deep into the rooms, and the dark frames around them sharpen the view. Light walls, timber floors and stone-like surfaces form the backdrop for custom millwork that runs cleanly along the room edges. The result is not decorative for its own sake; the joinery carries storage, frames the seating areas and keeps the rooms visually controlled.
That discipline is visible in the living spaces, where low furniture, built-in wall units and concealed lines keep the eye moving horizontally. In one room, a polished stone-like wall sits behind the seating, giving the lounge a harder edge. In another, a fireplace wall is set into a crisp surround, so the room reads more through planes and openings than through ornament. The luxury villa renovation uses those contrasts repeatedly: glass against stone, black profiles against pale walls, and soft drapery beside dark cabinetry.
Modern luxury interior with custom millwork and dark accents
The modern luxury interior is built from a small number of materials, but each one is handled with precision. There are marble-like surfaces in the living and dining areas, glossy and matte stone tones in the bathrooms, and black or dark brown joinery that absorbs light instead of reflecting it. Openings are deep, shelves are recessed, and the room divisions often come from changes in material rather than from heavy partitions. That makes the plan feel layered without becoming busy.
One of the most telling images shows a dining setting placed against a tall stone-look wall. The table sits low against that vertical surface, and the rounded pendant lights above it soften the harder geometry below. Elsewhere, a bank of dark custom millwork is cut with niches and hidden edges. It is the kind of joinery that does more than store objects: it marks the rhythm of a room and gives the interior a measured, tailored pace. Throughout the project, custom millwork is used as an architectural line, not just as furnishing.
Rooms that open and close with the same clarity
Several rooms use large glazed openings to pull the garden into view, but the feeling inside remains controlled. A fitness room faces the outside through full-height glass, while nearby spaces rely on black-framed doors and slim profiles to keep transitions exact. In the entertainment room, the darker walls and spot lighting compress the space and make the ceiling read lower and more intimate. The bar and reception area follow another register: a textured brick-like wall and a substantial bar front anchor the room with weight and shadow.
The bedroom views are quieter but just as carefully composed. One room places a custom wardrobe wall under a sloping ceiling, with a skylight or roof window bringing light down onto the storage fronts. In the bathrooms, stone-look finishes dominate the surfaces, while glass shower screens and a freestanding tub create clear, separate volumes. These are not showpiece gestures added at the end. They are part of the complete home renovation, and they help the house move from one mood to another without abrupt breaks.
A lower level with its own set of rooms
The lower level is described as a new cellar, and the programme gives it a distinct identity. Rather than serving only as storage, it brings together a guest accommodation, a cinema, a games room, a wine cellar and a direct connection to a courtyard garden. That mix of uses changes the way the house works. The basement is no longer the quietest part of the building; it becomes one of the most active, with different rooms arranged around leisure, gathering and retreat.
In the wine cellar, glass racks and illuminated storage walls line the room like a gallery of bottles. Dark surrounds make the lighting feel sharper, and the reflections in the glass add depth without clutter. It is a space that depends on restraint. Nearby, the entertainment rooms continue the darker palette, but with more enclosed walls and more pointed light. Together they make the lower level feel deliberate rather than leftover, which is where this luxury villa renovation separates itself from a standard extension or refit.
Wine storage framed by light and glass
The wine cellar is one of the clearest expressions of the project’s interior language. Bottles sit in illuminated rows behind glass, and the storage runs vertically enough to read as part of the architecture. Black framing tightens the composition. Instead of hiding the cellar, the design presents it as a room with clear edges and a visible purpose. In a house that already contains a cinema and a games room, that precision matters. Each room has its own atmosphere, but the same disciplined material palette keeps them related.
The garden is drawn around a rectangular pool
Outside, the garden is organised with the same straight lines seen inside. A rectangular swimming pool cuts through the planting, and its hard edge is echoed by terraces, steps and retaining walls around it. The borders are neat rather than loose, and the planting sits in controlled strips that keep the geometry readable. Stone, plastered or concrete volumes create changes in level, giving the garden a stepped route down and across the site. It feels designed as a series of surfaces rather than as a single lawn.
From some angles, the garden reads almost like an exterior room. A shaded dining terrace opens beside glazed walls, while other views show the pool set between clean borders and raised edges. The route from house to garden is direct, and the hard finishes make the transition feel intentional. This modern garden with pool does not compete with the interior; it extends the same visual logic outward, using fewer gestures and clearer lines. That restraint gives the outside spaces their force.
A complete home renovation shaped by preserved detail
What holds the project together is the decision to keep one recognisable element from the original house and let everything else move forward around it. The stained glass entrance detail remains a point of reference, while the rest of the house takes on a sharper material profile and a more varied programme. Guest rooms, leisure spaces, the wine cellar and the garden all sit within that wider frame. The luxury villa renovation is therefore not a single room or a single finish, but a sequence of spaces that each do a specific job and share the same controlled language.
Seen as a whole, the house moves from entrance to living area, from lower level to poolside, without losing its clarity. Large windows, stone-like surfaces, dark joinery and the rectangular pool repeat the same spatial idea in different forms. The project is strongest when those elements are allowed to stay simple. That is where the renovation gains its pace: in the preserved glass at the front door, in the measured custom millwork inside, and in the garden lines that carry the house outward.
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