Wim Celis BV

Farmhouse renovation with warm modern interior

The farmhouse renovation begins with a quiet contrast: a modest front reads one way, while the rooms beyond open out across the garden. Two L-shaped volumes have been brought together into one house, and that joint gives the plan its clarity. Inside, oak, stone and broad panes set the tone. The lower living room sits a few steps below the kitchen, so the eye drops toward the lawn before it reaches the horizon. It is a warm contemporary interior, but one that still keeps the old structure legible.

Two L-shaped volumes, one interior route

The plan is easy to read once you move through it. Two L-shaped buildings meet and form a single interior sequence, with level changes used to guide the transition from one room to the next. The step down into the living room is not a decorative gesture; it changes how the room feels and how the view arrives. From that lower position, the garden becomes part of the room. The result is a farmhouse renovation that uses the existing shape of the house instead of hiding it.

That clarity continues in the way the living areas are linked. Openings are placed to preserve long sightlines, and the kitchen no longer stands apart as a working zone. Instead, the room holds appliances, storage and a central island while still reading as part of the same domestic landscape. The modern farmhouse interior relies on that directness. You see the shift in level, the opening to the outside, and the measured use of materials before you notice any decorative detail.

Oak surfaces set the pace in the kitchen

The kitchen is anchored by a central oak island kitchen, finished with careful edges and a calm, restrained profile. Around it, the oak surfaces continue in vertical lines that make the wall read taller and slimmer. The built-in wall storage disappears into the composition until the joints and recesses catch the light. Modern appliances are present, but they do not take over the room. The wood carries the visual weight, and the worktop and fronts keep the space focused and practical without looking cold.

Seen across the room, the kitchen holds together through material repetition rather than ornament. The oak slat wall meets the smoother cabinet fronts, and that change in texture gives the room depth. Light from the garden shifts over the surfaces during the day, picking out the grain and the fine finishing around the island. This is where the farmhouse renovation moves from structural change to daily use: a room that can hold cooking, movement and conversation without losing its clear outline.

A lower living room with a wider view

Just a few steps below the kitchen, the garden view living room opens in a slower register. The drop in level creates a quiet threshold, so the seating area feels set apart while staying visually connected to the kitchen. Large panes frame the outside instead of slicing it up into smaller fragments. The view runs over the garden and outward, which gives the room a sense of depth that a flat floor plan would not provide. The furniture sits low against that view, keeping the glass and landscape in focus.

From inside, the room reads as a sequence of surfaces rather than a single box. A stone fireplace wall gives the living area a solid center, while the glass front keeps the fire visible without closing off the room. Nearby, built-in wall storage and open niches hold books and objects in a controlled rhythm. The modern farmhouse interior uses those elements to keep the room grounded. Stone, glass and timber each do a specific job, and the room feels built around them rather than decorated after the fact.

Stone, glass and storage in one measured composition

The stone fireplace wall is one of the strongest markers in the interior. Its weight contrasts with the lighter surfaces around it, and the glass front adds another layer to the reading of the room. On a nearby wall, the oak slat wall continues the vertical emphasis seen in the kitchen, while the built-in wall storage folds into the background until used. These are practical elements, but they also shape the pace of the interior. The eye moves from rougher stone to smoother wood, then to the clear plane of the glass.

Elsewhere, the dining area carries that same restraint. A long table sits under a row of pendant lights, with white wall openings behind it that keep the room from feeling closed in. The table surface and the floor finish echo the palette used in the living areas, so the shift between cooking, dining and sitting remains calm. The farmhouse renovation does not rely on display; it relies on proportion, on how the openings line up, and on how each material meets the next at a clean edge.

Light, thresholds and the indoor-outdoor link

Large windows and glazed openings keep the outside present in almost every room. In the living room, the garden becomes a fixed backdrop. Near the kitchen, the glazing pulls daylight across the oak fronts and the worktop, softening the harder lines of the appliances. Even the transitions between levels feel deliberate because the thresholds are visible in the floor rather than hidden. A modern farmhouse interior can easily become overworked; here, the rooms are left open enough for the structure to speak.

The exterior is read through the same material palette. Brick walls, dark frames and wooden accents set up the house before you step inside. A glass veranda extends the route toward the garden, and the swimming pool draws the eye beyond the terrace with its long rectangular shape. The black edging keeps the waterline precise, while the planted borders and lawn hold the edges of the composition. The house never loses contact with the outside, but the connection is handled in measured pieces rather than one grand gesture.

Material shifts that keep the house legible

What holds the project together is not a single feature, but the way the materials are allowed to stay distinct. Oak appears as slats, fronts and finish. Stone appears in the fireplace wall and in work surfaces. Glass is used to widen the view and flatten the distance between room and garden. Because the surfaces are not overcomplicated, the old farmhouse structure remains easy to read, even after the renovation. The building feels adjusted, not erased.

That is also why the house reads so clearly from room to room. The kitchen’s central island, the lower living room and the garden-facing openings all belong to one route, yet each space keeps its own scale. The farmhouse renovation takes its strength from those differences. One room holds the work of the house, another opens to the view, and the stone-and-oak palette carries through both without forcing them into the same role. It is a careful reworking of an old layout into a contemporary home that still shows how it is made.

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