Duravit

Modern luxury villa interior

The first impression is the contrast: dark cabinetry set against pale worktops, large panes of glass pulling daylight through the living spaces, and a floor of large-format stone-look tiles that keeps the rooms visually calm. The available inspiration book video points to a modern luxury villa interior where each zone is drawn with clear edges rather than heavy decoration. In the kitchen, the island becomes the centre of the room. In the living area, the windows take over the wall plane and open the view outward.

Kitchen lines built around the island

The kitchen shows a central island with a cooktop placed where it can anchor the room without breaking the sightlines. Around it, dark custom cabinetry rises close to the ceiling, giving the storage wall a strong vertical presence. Glass-fronted sections interrupt the darker fronts and lighten the composition. The contrast is most visible where the pale countertop meets the darker carcasses and where the work surface continues into the sink area with a dark backsplash behind it.

Recessed ceiling spotlights are set into the ceiling plane rather than left as decorative objects. That keeps the focus on the surfaces below: the island edge, the cooktop, the run of tall cupboards, and the neat transitions between the kitchen zones. The countertop has a composite stone look that reads as smooth and dense, especially in close-up. It catches light without turning glossy, which suits the restrained finish of the rest of the room.

Dark cabinetry, lighter surfaces

The cabinetry wall works almost like built-in furniture. It holds the kitchen together, but it also gives the room a darker frame that makes the lighter worktop stand out. At the sink area, the dark backsplash tightens the composition and keeps the vertical plane visually quiet. The result is a kitchen that depends on proportion and material contrast rather than ornament, with the cooktop and island acting as the main reference points.

Living room large windows and a defined fireplace wall

The living room large windows are the clearest spatial move in the project. Dark window frames set a firm outline around the glass, while the openings bring in broad views and a lot of daylight. Furniture sits low in front of those openings, so the room keeps its horizontal line. The seating arrangement is paired with a modern fireplace wall finished in a dark stone-like surface, which gives the room a second focal point away from the windows.

Across the living zone, the fireplace wall does not read as a separate decorative element. It is part of the room’s structure. The dark TV wall nearby follows the same logic, using a restrained surface to hold the screen and the surrounding fittings without adding visual noise. In several images, the layered lighting is clear: ceiling spots, wall light, and the reflected glow from the glass all work across the same open plan.

How the wall surfaces shape the room

The strongest moments come from the transitions. A dark wall meets a lighter floor. A glazed opening meets a solid panel. A seating area changes into a dining area without any abrupt shift in material language. That makes the modern fireplace wall feel embedded in the architecture of the room rather than added later. Even the curtains and side window treatments stay close to the frame, so the glazing remains the main event.

An open dining area that stays connected to the glass

The dining area with windows sits within the same open layout, but it reads as its own zone because of the table placement and the repeat of the dark framing around the room. Light moves across the table surface and the surrounding floor tiles, and the windows on multiple sides keep the edges of the space visible. An inset framed artwork appears on one dark wall, giving that surface a measured pause before the room opens back toward the glass.

This part of the interior shows how the project handles scale. The table is generous, yet it does not dominate the room because the window wall stays active behind it. The dark accent wall and the nearby TV wall echo the kitchen’s darker cabinetry, tying the living and dining areas together without forcing them into one visual block. The result is an open plan where each zone is readable from the next one.

Materials that stay visible in close-up

Large-format tiles are important here, even though they never shout for attention. Their size reduces the number of joints on the floor and lets the other finishes lead. In the kitchen, reflective worktop details show a smooth transition from one surface to another. In the living room, the stone-look fireplace wall and the dark TV wall add weight to the composition, while the glazing keeps the room from feeling enclosed. The whole interior depends on those exact material shifts.

The inspiration book video offers a useful overview because it shows the spaces both in relation to one another and as isolated details. That combination makes the modern luxury villa interior easier to read: cabinetry at full height, a kitchen island cooktop in the centre, a dark backsplash at the sink zone, and living room large windows that set the rhythm of the plan. Nothing is overworked. The interest comes from how the finishes meet.

Seen as a sequence, the rooms move from kitchen to living to dining without losing their own identity. The same dark tones return in the custom storage, the fireplace wall, the TV wall, and the window framing, while the lighter countertops and flooring keep the plan open. It is a project built on measured contrast, clear sightlines, and surfaces that do their work quietly.

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Duravit high end interieur, Luxury, Design, Exclusive, Modern, Custom Made, Special, Beautiful
Duravit high end interieur, Luxury, Design, Exclusive, Modern, Custom Made, Special, Beautiful
Duravit high end interieur, Luxury, Design, Exclusive, Modern, Custom Made, Special, Beautiful
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