Modern light home with a natural stone PU resin floor
The first thing you notice is the floor: a light natural stone PU resin floor that runs straight through the kitchen, hall and living area. Its pale tone keeps the rooms open, while the subtle speckling softens the surface enough to read as material rather than plain color. In this light interior, the floor does more than connect rooms; it sets the pace for the long views across the plan and gives the fitted kitchen a calm base to sit on.
A fitted kitchen that reads as one long line
The kitchen is arranged as a clear, extended run of cabinetry, with tall fronts in a light wood tone and integrated handles that sit almost flush with the doors. A stone-look island countertop anchors the center of the room and adds a stronger horizontal line across the space. From the seating side, the island works as a pause point between the cooking zone and the wider living area, while the bright seamless flooring keeps the transition around it visually quiet.
Above the work zone, a wood slat ceiling brings another layer into view. The slats follow the length of the kitchen and reinforce the linear layout below them. Their texture is picked up again in the cabinet fronts, which keeps the room from feeling flat even though the palette stays restrained. Daylight from the rear openings lands on the pale floor and the stone-look island countertop, where reflections are soft rather than glossy.
Natural stone and PU in a single surface
The natural stone PU resin floor is described as a mix of natural stone and polyurethane. That combination shows in the surface itself: a smooth finish with small tonal shifts that are visible without dominating the room. The floor is available in different natural stone colors and various grain sizes, which explains why the project can stay light without becoming one-note. Here, the material is used as a continuous field that lets the kitchen furniture, wall openings and ceiling treatment carry the detail.
The project text also notes that the floor feels comfortable and is suitable for families with children. Those characteristics matter in a house like this, where the plan stays open and the walking route is clear from one room to the next. The surface is also described as durable and easy to maintain, making it a practical choice for a home that relies on one uninterrupted finish instead of separate room-by-room flooring. That single decision shapes the way the interior is read.
Open views between kitchen, hall and living room
What gives the plan its strength is the way the openings line up. From the kitchen, the eye moves toward the dining area and then to the windows at the back. From the hall, the same light flooring continues past wooden frames into the living space, where white walls and a few pieces of furniture keep the room open. These open-plan sight lines make the house feel longer than it may be on paper, because the boundaries between zones stay low and easy to read.
In the living room, the floor remains the most constant element. It runs under the door opening with a wooden frame and into a quieter sitting area, where the pale grey surface meets white plastered walls. There is no abrupt change in material to interrupt the route. Instead, the eye follows the floor edge, the wall openings and the timber details, all of which keep the rooms connected without flattening them into one single space.
Details that hold the palette together
The visual focus is not limited to the floor. The island shows a white marble-look finish in one image, while the longer counter and splash area shift toward a softer stone appearance. Cabinetry in light wood repeats along the wall and at the tall storage bank, where the front lines stay narrow and precise. Even the built-in black appliance reads as part of the composition because the surrounding surfaces are so controlled. The result is a kitchen that relies on proportion and material contrast rather than ornament.
Along the side wall, the cabinetry becomes even more minimal. The grain of the wood is visible in the fronts, but the pattern is restrained, and the joinery remains tight. A detail shot shows the edge of the stone-look worktop cutting into a corner, which helps explain how the room has been handled: straight runs, sharp turns, and few visual breaks. The bright seamless flooring below all of this keeps the furniture and wall planes from competing with the surface underfoot.
Light, timber and stone in a practical family setting
The source text describes the house as a modern, light family home, and the photographs support that reading through the material choices rather than through decoration. The light natural stone PU resin floor is present in every key view, from the kitchen island to the corridor and the living room opening. Around it, the wood slat ceiling, timber cabinet fronts and wooden door frames introduce warmth through structure, not through color alone. It is a restrained interior, but not an empty one.
Even the smaller spaces follow the same logic. An open niche with a wooden interior, white walls and a continuation of the grey floor shows how the material language moves into storage and transition areas. Another view through the hall frames the living room beyond, again using the same floor and timber trim to guide the eye. The house depends on those repeated elements: one floor surface, one kitchen language, and one clear line of sight from room to room.
Design: Jolanda Diks interieurontwerp
Photography: iamaureen.com
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