Omarchitectuur

Rooftop terrace redesign of 350 m² with sauna and outdoor kitchen

Wood decking, pale brickwork and vertical slats set the tone on this rooftop terrace redesign 350 m². The surface is large, but the layout avoids feeling exposed. Instead, the terrace is broken up by vertical screening walls, planting beds and covered edges that guide movement from one seating area to the next. A sauna and an outdoor kitchen built-in are part of the plan, giving the roof clear everyday functions rather than leaving it as one open expanse.

Vertical walls that divide without closing off the terrace

The strongest gesture is also the quietest. Vertical screening walls mark out different parts of the terrace while keeping sightlines open enough to read the whole roof as one place. In the images, this happens through slim timber slats, pale wall surfaces and sections of masonry that step in and out of view. The result is a clear example of modern outdoor zoning: the roof gains smaller pockets for sitting, passing through and pausing, but nothing feels boxed in.

That approach matters on a 350 m² rooftop, where scale can easily overwhelm the use of the space. Here, the divisions are built into the architecture of the terrace itself. One corner may hold a dining setup near the cooking zone, while another sits under a canopy with open air still around it. The vertical elements do not act as decoration alone. They set the edges of the room, control views and make each area feel more legible.

A terrace of wood, stone and planted edges

The material palette stays restrained: wood decking underfoot, brick and stone walls at the perimeter, and metal details in railings and framing. Against that harder base, planting brings a softer line along parts of the roof. Siergrassen and low green beds appear as screening rather than ornament, interrupting the straight edges of the terrace and easing the transition between built surfaces and open sky. The textures remain readable even in close-up, from the grain of the timber to the rougher wall finishes.

This mix gives the roof a measured rhythm. The wood decking pulls the eye across the terrace in long, straight runs, while the masonry and stone surfaces hold the space in place. Where planting sits in front of a wall or railing, it changes the edge from a hard boundary into something that filters views. That is especially visible in the detailed shots, where the grasses sit low and dense enough to screen without blocking the terrace behind them.

Seating areas shaped by light and cover

Several seating areas appear across the roof, each with a slightly different relationship to light. One is tucked under a roof or awning, where the canopy softens the bright surface outside and creates a more sheltered zone. Another sits more openly on the decking, with black chairs and a white table set against a low wall. The furniture stays minimal, which leaves the structure of the terrace visible: deck boards, wall planes and openings do most of the work.

Because the terrace is not closed off, each seating area still connects to the wider roof. You can read the move from one zone to the next in the floor pattern, the change in wall height, or a shift from open sky to shaded cover. That makes the covered rooftop seating useful without making it feel separate from the rest of the project. The roof keeps its length and scale, but the experience changes from one corner to another.

How the canopy changes the roof

The canopy does more than provide shelter. It creates a visible pause in the roofline and introduces another layer above the deck. Underneath, the light becomes calmer and the furniture sits more clearly within the frame of the terrace. Outside that covered area, the roof opens up again to railings, planting and distant views. The shift is simple, but it gives the terrace a sequence of spaces rather than one continuous platform.

A sauna and cooking zone placed into the layout

The sauna and the outdoor kitchen are integrated into the rooftop as part of the daily use of the space. The cooking zone is shown with an inbuilt hob or cooktop set into a stone-like counter, which gives it a firmer presence than loose furniture would. Nearby, the roof remains open enough for chairs and small gatherings. The sauna is present in the project brief, and its inclusion adds another function to the terrace without changing the calm reading of the wider composition.

What stands out is the way these uses are distributed rather than isolated. The outdoor kitchen built-in sits within the same visual language as the rest of the terrace: stone, wood and clean edges. It does not compete with the seating zones or the planting. Instead, it becomes one more defined part of the roof, aligned with the same logic of separation and openness that shapes the project as a whole.

Details that keep the scale under control

Close-ups make the strategy easier to read. Vertical wooden slats repeat in a steady pattern, turning a plain wall into a screen that breaks up views without sealing them off. In other images, the brick or stone background is darker and flatter, which helps the greenery stand out in front of it. These small shifts in surface and tone are what keep the large terrace from feeling flat. Each zone has a different edge, and those edges do much of the visual work.

The roof also uses simple contrast to keep its structure clear. Black chairs sit against pale surfaces. Green planting cuts across the rectilinear deck. The awning creates shade where the rest of the terrace stays bright. None of these moves is dramatic on its own, but together they make the rooftop terrace redesign 350 m² readable from several distances. From far away, it is one large roof; up close, it is a sequence of distinct places.

Materials that define the roof’s edges

Wood decking gives the ground plane warmth in tone, while stone and brick keep the boundaries firm. Metal appears in railings and structural parts, adding a slimmer line wherever the roof opens to the outside. The combination is practical in appearance without feeling heavy. It lets the vertical screening walls and planting beds take over as the main tools for zoning, rather than relying on extra furniture or ornament to mark out space.

That restraint is visible throughout the project. The terrace does not depend on many elements to feel complete; it depends on how those elements are placed. A wall moves forward, a bench or chair sits in shade, a planting strip softens the edge, and the roof changes character. This is what makes the project more than a large open terrace. The surface has been edited into usable parts, each one shaped by line, material and view.

A rooftop that reads as one place and several rooms

Seen in full, the terrace holds together because its divisions stay porous. The vertical screening walls, covered sections and planting lines create enough separation for privacy, yet the roof still reads as a single outdoor level. That is where the project is most convincing: not in closing space off, but in giving a large roof a clear order. The sauna, the cooking zone and the seating areas all sit inside that order, each with its own edge and its own relation to the light.

For a rooftop terrace redesign 350 m², that is the essential move. The scale remains visible. The deck remains open. But the use of the roof changes through structure rather than accumulation. With wood decking underfoot, vertical screening walls at the sides and a built-in outdoor kitchen as one of the key anchors, the terrace is set up as a series of defined outdoor rooms that still belong to the same roof.

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