Zilva Vloeren

Sand-Colored Resin Floor in a Warm Modern Interior

A glossy sand-colored resin floor runs through the interior and catches the light before the furniture does. Its pale tone softens the straight lines of the rooms, while the green and brown accents bring depth to the white walls and clean finishes. The result is not built from decoration, but from surfaces: resin underfoot, restrained cabinetry, and a few carefully placed materials that change the feel of each room as you move through the house.

Light, reflection, and a floor that carries the rooms

The sand-colored resin floor is the constant element here. In the living areas, it reflects daylight from the large windows and gives the open rooms a smooth, continuous base. The sheen is visible in the foreground of several images, especially where light falls across the surface in long bands. That subtle gloss keeps the floor from disappearing into the background; it stays present, almost like a low sheen of color that shifts with the angle of view.

Because the floor extends through the circulation zones as well, it does more than finish a room. It connects the kitchen, seating area, and passageways in one visual line. White walls and simple trim keep that line clear. Nothing breaks the route abruptly, so the eye moves easily from one opening to the next. The slightly mottled appearance of the resin adds just enough movement to avoid a flat surface.

Green and brown accents against a quiet base

Against the pale floor, the green interior accents stand out without taking over. They appear in upholstery, plants, and selected details, while brown tones settle into the seating and wood finishes. This gives the rooms a grounded feel without loading them with color. The palette stays close to the materials already present: white, sand, black metal, and wood. Each tone has a clear job to do, and none of them needs to shout.

The furniture follows that same restraint. Soft textiles break up the harder lines of the cabinetry and shelving, and leather brings a firmer note into the room. From one angle, the living space reads as calm and spare; from another, the brown and green layers become more visible and the room feels denser. That shift is part of what makes the interior interesting. It changes as soon as the light or viewpoint changes.

A black wood shelving wall that sets the rhythm

One of the strongest details is the black framed shelving wall with wood compartments. Its grid-like structure gives the room a clear rhythm, especially when seen beside the continuous floor. The darker frame holds the lighter wood inserts, and together they create a measured contrast against the white wall behind it. Books and objects are placed within that structure rather than floating loosely in the room, so the storage becomes part of the composition.

The shelving wall also helps anchor the open-plan kitchen living area. It gives the large room a vertical counterpoint to the horizontal floor plane. Seen across the seating area or behind the dining table, the black frame gives the space definition without closing it off. It is a quiet but firm element, and it makes the open plan easier to read.

The open-plan kitchen living area in clear lines

The kitchen uses white fronts with straight edges and little visual noise. That plainness works well beside the resin floor, which already carries a strong visual presence through its gloss and soft color variation. In the images, the kitchen reads as part of the wider living space rather than a separate zone. The cabinetry sits low and clean against the wall, while the floor continues underneath and keeps the whole area visually open.

Seen from the dining side, the room feels arranged around long views. Chairs in green and brown tones sit near the table, and the kitchen disappears into the background instead of dominating the scene. The horizontal blinds and curtains at the windows reinforce the straight geometry of the room. Nothing is overworked. The space relies on proportion, light, and the contrast between smooth floor, matte wall, and restrained furniture.

Material contrast at the edges of the room

The project becomes more layered when you look at the meeting points: wood against black metal, gloss against matte paint, soft fabric beside the resin floor. These edges are where the interior gains depth. A polished surface near the base of the room reflects the window light, while the shelving wall and kitchen fronts stay visually quiet. The balance comes from that difference in texture, not from ornament.

In the seating area, the resin floor is visible even where furniture fills most of the frame. That matters, because it keeps the floor from becoming a background detail. It remains part of the room’s identity, especially where the glossy surface catches bright reflections from the windows. The effect is strongest in the tighter views, where the floor’s sheen and pale color take over the lower half of the image.

What the bathroom adds to the palette

The bathroom shifts the material language without leaving it behind. Marble-look bathroom tiles line the walls in darker brown and black tones, and a glass shower partition keeps the space visually open. A white vanity with simple drawer fronts sits below the wall surface, giving the room a crisp edge. Here, the palette becomes more compact and graphic. The dark tile, clear glass, and white furniture create a tighter contrast than in the living areas.

Even in the bathroom, the floor treatment stays relevant because the light surface and gloss continue the same visual logic seen elsewhere in the house. The room does not rely on decorative excess. It uses tiled surfaces, a clean basin unit, and the transparent shower screen to keep the layout legible. That makes the bathroom feel connected to the rest of the interior rather than treated as a separate statement room.

A controlled palette that stays with the architecture

The strength of the interior lies in the way the materials repeat without becoming monotonous. Sand, white, black, brown, and green appear across the rooms in slightly different proportions. In one place the resin floor leads; in another, the shelving wall or kitchen fronts take over. The result is a house where the eye keeps moving, but never loses the thread. The floor remains the most consistent cue, tying the open-plan kitchen living area, the passages, and the quieter corners together.

Photography by BURO M design.

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