Duravit

Stylish interior with custom details, natural stone and recessed lighting

Dark paneling, stone surfaces and narrow bands of light set the tone before the eye reaches any furniture. The rooms are built around a stylish interior with custom details and natural stone, where recessed ceiling spotlights pick out edges, alcoves and wall planes instead of flooding everything equally. Warm light sits inside the joinery and along the ceiling lines, so the finish is read in layers: matte black, grey stone, pale tile and the darker grain of wood.

Bedroom walls that do more than frame the bed

The bedroom is anchored by a padded wall in a deep tone, with light coming from small built-in points above and beside it. That arrangement keeps the bed area calm without flattening the room. A dark door panel sits to the left, while heavier curtains fall on the right and soften the opening. The result is a compact composition of fabric, paneling and light, all pulled tight around the sleeping zone.

Seen closely, the bedroom also shows how the stylish interior with custom details and natural stone moves beyond a single finish. The ceiling spots are set into a dark line, which makes the light feel deliberate rather than decorative. The wall treatment takes up the full height and turns the bed wall into a clear architectural plane. Nothing is added for noise; the few elements present do the work.

A living room built around stone and fire

In the living room, a dark stacked stone wall rises behind a low custom unit with an integrated fireplace and open shelving. The stone carries visible variation, so the wall reads as a solid backdrop rather than a flat surface. Above it, a large artwork breaks the width and adds scale. The ceiling is cut by regular recessed ceiling spotlights set into a dark beam, which gives the room a measured rhythm from front to back.

Glazed pendant lights hover over the seating area and bring a lighter note to the darker shell. Their round forms contrast with the straight run of the TV wall and the low fire surround. This is where the luxury modern interior becomes most legible: hard surfaces, soft seating and controlled lighting are kept in separate layers, and the custom joinery holds them together without drawing attention to itself. The focus stays on material, line and proportion.

Custom cabinetry that follows the room

Along the living wall, the cabinetry is not treated as a separate object. It runs low, aligns with the fireplace and gives the stone a base. The shelves and openings are integrated into the wall rather than clipped on as afterthoughts. That approach makes the dark custom cabinet wall feel embedded in the room, and it helps the eye move from one finish to another without interruption. The effect is quiet, but the construction is precise.

Hallways with crisp doors and clear edges

The hallway is stripped back to a few strong moves: flat dark door panels, white trim and a floor laid in a wood- or stone-look pattern. The contrast is immediate. Light frames the openings, while the darker panels pull the passage inward. These sleek interior doors do not announce themselves; they sit flush in the wall and let the passage read as a sequence of framed openings rather than a corridor of separate doors.

Because the palette stays restrained, the details stand out. A narrow shadow line at the base, a clean reveal around the doorway and the change in floor pattern are enough to give the hall structure. It is a useful counterpoint to the heavier rooms nearby. Where the living space leans on stone and integrated fire elements, the hall relies on flat surfaces and tight junctions.

Stone, glass and tile in the bathroom

The bathroom and shower area shift the project toward cooler surfaces. A glass shower enclosure sits in front of grey stone-look tiling, and the transparency keeps the shower zone from closing in on itself. Dark linear ceiling details run above the room, with small recessed spots punctuating the surface. The glass shower enclosure lets the tile work stay visible from outside the wet zone, which makes the room feel more open without using extra decoration.

Elsewhere in the bathroom, the stone treatment continues across wall panels and the long vanity run. The surface reads as natural stone or stone-look material rather than a printed finish, with grey tones and pale veining holding the composition together. This is the most direct expression of the natural stone bathroom in the project. The lines are straight, the joints are visible, and the lighting stays close to the ceiling so the materials remain the main event.

Detailing that keeps the surfaces readable

The bathroom avoids visual clutter by placing the fittings inside a controlled grid of tile, glass and light. The shower wall is clear, the edges are sharp, and the ceiling treatment helps define the perimeter of the space. Nothing is oversized. Even the darker strips overhead work as a frame for the room rather than a feature in their own right. The result is measured and legible, with each material given room to register.

A kitchen and living area with a stone countertop

The kitchen and living space continue the same language through a broad work surface with a natural stone kitchen countertop. Around it, the cabinetry rises in dark, matte volumes with built-in niches and accent light. The countertop cuts a pale horizontal band through the darker setting, and that contrast is what keeps the room active. It is a practical move, but it also gives the kitchen a clear visual anchor inside the open plan.

Look at the way the niches are lit and the wall panels step upward, and the room begins to read as a built composition rather than a collection of separate pieces. The materials repeat from room to room—stone, dark wood finish, glass and restrained fabric—yet each area uses them differently. In the kitchen they are spread across worktop and storage; in the living room they gather around the fireplace; in the bedroom they tighten around the bed wall.

The project page also includes a short prompt to view a video with the inspiration book of RMR Interieurbouw, together with a photography credit to René van Dongen. Those references sit alongside the images rather than interrupting them, which is fitting for a page that depends so much on what the camera catches: the line of a spotlight, the edge of a stone wall, the shift from opaque panel to glass. The sequence holds together because the details are visible first.

Across the bedrooms, hall, bathroom and kitchen, the same careful use of material and light keeps the interior readable. A dark custom cabinet wall may carry the living room, while a glass shower enclosure opens the wet room and recessed ceiling spotlights trace the ceiling planes. It is a stylish interior with custom details and natural stone in the plainest sense: surfaces are joined tightly, lighting is placed with restraint, and every room is allowed to show its own character through finish and line.

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NEW 2026 Jubileum Edition The Best Interior Designers Benelux

Uniquely Numbered • Anniversary Edition • Limited
Order Now €125
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