Britt van Namen

Home renovation with organic arches, stone-look niches, and warm bronze accents

The first thing you notice is the curve: a soft opening that leads the eye from one zone to the next, then another in the stair wall, then a rounded edge around a niche. This home renovation turns a compact second stay into a place that can hold a family of six without feeling cramped. The layout does the work quietly. A kitchen, sitting area, stair, and sleeping zones are linked by the same gentle line, while light walls, pale textiles, and stone surfaces keep the rooms from closing in.

Arches that carry the plan from room to room

The project is built around organic arch interior design rather than isolated decorative gestures. The arches are not left for one feature wall; they repeat in openings, recesses, and corners so the route through the house reads as one continuous movement. Rounded niches soften the transitions between the living kitchen and the staircase, and the same shape returns near the night areas. That repetition gives the compact plan a slower pace. Instead of hard breaks, the rooms unfold through openings that are easy to read at a glance.

Small details keep that language consistent. Curved edges appear on cabinets and window elements, and the Pebbles handles are placed across different parts of the interior, from storage fronts to frame details. They are tiny against the larger masonry-like surfaces, but they keep the hand moving along the same rounded line. It is a useful reminder that the project relies on continuity at every scale, not only in the main rooms.

A kitchen alcove with a stone surface and built-in storage

The stone-look kitchen alcove gives the living zone a fixed point. Its surface reads as solid and calm, with a marbled movement that stands out against the lighter plaster around it. The alcove is tucked into the plan rather than announced from a distance, which makes the cooking area feel part of the room rather than separate from it. Built-in shelves and recessed edges keep the working side neat, while the rounded opening frames the whole composition.

Seen from the room, the kitchen is less about display and more about containment. The alcove holds the visual weight, leaving the surrounding seating area open and quiet. That contrast matters in a compact home renovation like this one: heavy surfaces stay in one place, softer textiles and pale walls carry the rest. The result is a clear reading of space, with the kitchen anchored by stone and the adjacent zone left lighter in tone.

Rounded niches in the sleeping areas

The sleeping rooms continue the same architectural idea, but with even softer gestures. One bed sits inside a curved niche, with built-in side recesses acting as small night surfaces. Another room shows a rounded wall opening around the bed zone, with storage tucked into the surrounding joinery. These are not decorative cut-outs. They shape the room, define the edge of the bed, and make the wall do more than simply divide space. In a house this compact, that kind of inbuilt structure matters.

Light plaster wraps the bed walls, and the ceiling stays plain so the rounded outline remains clear. A curtain line softens the window edge nearby, while the joinery keeps the darker technical elements out of sight. The rooms feel measured rather than crowded. Every recess has a job: to hold storage, to frame the bed, or to let the eye rest on an empty curve instead of a hard corner.

Why the bedroom niches work so well

The appeal of the rounded niches is practical as much as visual. A curved opening absorbs the bed zone, reducing the need for separate furniture around it. Side recesses replace loose bedside tables in several places, and the built-in walls create a sense of order without adding weight. The shapes are simple, but they do a lot of work. They direct movement through narrow parts of the house and help the sleeping areas feel settled even when the floor area is limited.

Light walls, bronze accents, and a pared-back material palette

The material palette stays deliberately narrow. Pale paint, soft fabrics, and stone surfaces form the base, while warm veneer and bronze details bring in contrast. That bronze appears in handles, taps, and small hardware moments, where it catches the light without taking over the room. The effect is restrained, but not flat. The tones shift between chalky white, sand, and the darker line of the stone-look finishes, so the eye keeps moving from surface to surface.

Textiles play an important role in that calm reading. Curtains fall in loose vertical folds, rugs sit close to the floor, and upholstery stays muted so the rounded walls can remain the main feature. Nothing in the palette is fighting for attention. Even the large windows feel quiet because their dressings soften the daylight instead of blocking it. The whole interior leans into a minimal French atmosphere, but it does so through surfaces and proportions rather than through overt references.

Technical elements hidden behind the surfaces

One of the most convincing parts of this home renovation is what you do not see. Air conditioning and other technical elements are visually removed, leaving the plastered walls and built-in joinery to read without interruption. That absence keeps the rounded openings clean and avoids the kind of clutter that can quickly break the mood in a small house. The rooms stay focused on shape, light, and the meeting point between stone, wood, and fabric.

Because the technical work is concealed, the material transitions become more noticeable. A stone edge meets a lacquered front. A bronze handle sits against a pale cabinet. A curtain softens a hard opening. Those small shifts carry the project. They are what make the interior feel composed when the plan itself has to do a lot with very little space.

A second stay shaped by movement, not excess

What makes the project memorable is its discipline. The plan does not rely on extra decoration to create interest. It uses arches, rounded niches, and built-in volumes to move from one room to the next. The same soft geometry appears in the living kitchen, along the stair, and in the sleeping areas, which gives the house a clear internal rhythm. With only a limited palette of stone, plaster, wood, and bronze, the rooms stay legible and calm.

That restraint suits the brief of a second stay for a family. The rooms need to absorb daily use, guests, luggage, and long stays, yet the house still reads lightly. Stone-look surfaces carry the weight. Curves soften the edges. Textiles and pale walls keep the light moving. It is a compact home renovation, but every surface is doing a specific job, and that clarity is what makes the interior hold together.

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