Livium

Detached house transformation with custom interior and natural stone details

The first thing you notice is the way the rooms open toward the light. Large window sections with black frames pull the greenery inside, while the ground floor has been partly altered and extended to create more living space for a family of five. Inside, the detached house transformation is shaped by custom joinery, dark surfaces and natural materials that do not compete for attention. They work in layers: wood underfoot, stone at eye level, and a fireplace wall that cuts a dark line through the living room.

The layout was adapted to the wishes of the residents, and that shows in the shifts between rooms. Openings are framed rather than left plain, storage is built into the walls, and the circulation feels planned around sightlines as much as around movement. This home renovation does not rely on decorative excess. Instead, it uses cabinets, niches and surface changes to define each zone. The result is a custom interior where every fixed element has a clear place in the room.

Living room walls that hold storage and fire

The living room centers on a wall unit with open niches, closed storage and a built-in fireplace niche set into a dark surround. The fireplace sits low and recessed, so the surrounding joinery can take over visually. Above and beside it, shelves and openings break up the wall into smaller parts. That makes the custom interior feel measured rather than filled. A stone-look surface appears again in the TV recess, giving the wall depth without adding extra decoration.

Across from the built-in fireplace niche, the seating area stays close to the window line. Black window frames outline the glass and sharpen the view toward the garden. The room reads in contrasts: pale upholstery, darker wall panels, and a warm floor finish running through the space. Nothing is overexplained. The living room simply lets the materials do the work, with the fireplace wall and storage joinery forming one continuous backdrop for daily use.

Small openings, large effect

Several detail shots show how the walls are handled at close range. Dark edges frame the fireplace opening, while vertical lines in the timber panelling add rhythm beside the shelves. Elsewhere, the stone finish details show a fine grain and soft veining rather than a polished shine. These are small moves, but they shape how the room feels when you stand inside it. The surfaces are not treated as separate features; they are stitched together by the same restrained palette.

A custom kitchen with dark fronts and stone textures

The kitchen shifts the tone without changing the language of the house. Dark kitchen cabinets line the wall, interrupted by lighter stone-look surfaces and a marble look backsplash that reflects a little light back into the room. A long work zone and a peninsula-like element draw the eye forward, making the kitchen feel anchored rather than floating in the plan. The fronts are tight and even, with a warm wood-toned handle line introducing just enough relief to break the dark plane.

Above the work surface, rail lighting and small spots keep the kitchen practical without adding visual clutter. The stone-look backsplash rises behind the cooking area and gives the wall a quiet pattern of veining. Seen from the living room, the kitchen reads as part of the same custom interior, but it has its own rhythm: darker cabinetry, a crisp countertop edge, and open light from the adjacent rooms. The focus stays on material and proportion rather than display.

Edges, handles and the way the light falls

Close-up views make the detailing more precise. A horizontal handle strip in a warmer wood tone runs through the front, and the panel joints stay straight and close. The marble look backsplash meets the worktop with a clean seam, while the lighting above throws a controlled strip of brightness across the cooking zone. These are the sorts of details that make a custom kitchen read as deliberate when you move through it, even before you notice the larger layout.

Transitions that frame the route through the house

In the hall and adjoining openings, the architecture becomes more graphic. Dark framing outlines a doorway zone and sets off the white walls around it. The staircase sits just beyond, with its straight run and light balustrade giving the transition a clear direction. This is where the detached house transformation becomes most legible as a sequence of spaces. The opening is not left as a simple pass-through; it is treated as a framed moment between one room and the next.

Black window frames repeat the same disciplined line in other parts of the house, tying the interior views together. The glass does not just bring in light; it sets up a second layer of depth, especially where the seating area faces the greenery outside. In these passages, the home renovation feels calm but not empty. The rooms are linked by openings, thresholds and sightlines, each one shaped by the same preference for dark outlines against pale surfaces.

A natural stone bathroom with a restrained palette

The bathroom turns to a quieter combination of surfaces. Natural stone bathroom finishes cover the walls with a muted texture that sits well beside the black tapware and the round mirror. The wash zone is stripped back to the essentials: basin, tap, mirror and a stone-like backdrop that carries the room. Instead of adding contrast through colour, the design relies on surface depth and the shift from matte wall treatment to reflective fittings.

That restraint keeps the room close to the rest of the custom interior. The stone finish details are visible here in a more direct way, with a surface that reads as solid rather than ornamental. Around the edges, the black fixtures draw a thin line across the lighter material. The bathroom does not push itself forward; it settles into the house with the same measured use of materials found in the living room and kitchen.

Vertical wood panels and the quieter material moments

One of the smallest but most memorable details is the vertical wood panel feature, lit so the grooves and edges become visible instead of hidden. The light catches the paneling from the side, making the surface look deeper and more architectural. Nearby, close-ups of woven upholstery and wood-look flooring show how texture shifts from room to room without breaking the overall reading of the house. It is a detached house transformation built from these small, physical changes.

What holds the project together is not a single dramatic gesture but the repetition of material cues: dark frames, stone surfaces, timber lines and built-in volumes. The ground floor extension creates the extra room the family needed, yet the real story is in the way those added square meters are finished. Storage is built into the walls, the fireplace is recessed into a dark niche, and the kitchen and bathroom continue the same visual language. The result is a home renovation where the details stay visible and the rooms stay grounded in use.

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Luxury, Design, Exclusive, Modern, Custom Made, Special, Beautiful
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Luxury, Design, Exclusive, Modern, Custom Made, Special, Beautiful
Luxury, Design, Exclusive, Modern, Custom Made, Special, Beautiful
Pre sale

NEW 2026 Jubileum Edition The Best Interior Designers Benelux

Uniquely Numbered • Anniversary Edition • Limited
Order Now €125
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