Penthouse interior with large windows and custom details
The living room is set against a long run of glass, and the daylight changes the whole pace of the penthouse interior. The upper level is where the main living space sits, so the view stays present while the darker palette keeps the room from feeling washed out. Brown tones, black frames and a custom interior approach give the space weight without closing it in. The result is a two-level penthouse interior that uses the windows as part of the layout rather than as a backdrop.
Living with the view on the top floor
From the sofa, the room opens toward the city through large windows that stretch across the living area. That transparency is the first thing you notice, but it is the way the furniture sits under it that makes the room readable. A bronze-brown armchair, a textured rug and low seating keep the sightlines open. The dark brown interior palette follows the light instead of fighting it, which is why the room can hold stronger tones and still feel clear.
The living room large windows do more than frame the view. They also shape the color choices throughout the apartment. Because so much light enters the space, the darker wood tones and brown finishes have a grounded role here. The eye moves from the glazed edge to the lower furniture line, then to the built-in surfaces along the wall. That shift is repeated in several rooms, giving the penthouse interior a consistent rhythm without relying on one repeated gesture.
Custom wall storage that keeps the room open
A custom wall unit runs along one of the main living zones, with recessed openings that break up the storage front and leave space for display and media. The television is absorbed into the composition rather than placed in front of it. On another wall, a framed niche and darker panels tighten the geometry of the room, while the timber finish softens the edge. This is where the custom interior work becomes visible: not as decoration, but as a set of built-in surfaces that hold the plan together.
Built-in lines around the seating area
Across the seating area, the joinery keeps the wall plane calm and the floor clear. Openings in the cabinetry create pauses, so the storage does not read as one solid block. That detail matters in a penthouse interior with large windows, because the eye already has plenty to take in. The built-in elements need to stay quiet. Here they do, with dark surrounds, warm timber and measured proportions that echo the scale of the glazing nearby.
A kitchen island as the center of the lower level
The kitchen is arranged around a central island, which sets the working zone apart from the rest of the room without breaking the open plan. Tall cabinets sit to one side, with built-in appliances and a darker front treatment that anchors the wall. Above the island, pendant lights drop a smaller circle of focus into the larger room. The kitchen island gives the penthouse interior a clear place to gather, while the surrounding glass keeps the space visually connected to the living areas.
Two-tone cabinetry and linear lighting sharpen the kitchen’s outline. In one view, the island front reads as a solid volume; in another, the back wall reveals a cleaner, lighter surface next to the darker joinery. That contrast is restrained, but it is doing real work. It separates cooking, serving and sitting without adding visual noise. The kitchen design also benefits from the long daylight spill from the windows, which lifts the deeper finishes and keeps the room from flattening into a single color field.
Lower level rooms with a quieter tempo
The lower part of the apartment is described as the calmer zone, and the material cues reflect that change in pace. This is where the project moves from the livelier top floor to spaces for washing, sleeping and waking up. The transition is not marked by a dramatic shift in style. Instead, the finishes become more enclosed and the light more controlled. Darker surfaces, glass partitions and stone-look tiles establish a slower mood, while still belonging to the same two-level penthouse interior.
That quieter level also makes room for the practical side of the plan. The bathroom and adjoining private areas are treated as part of the same spatial sequence, not as isolated rooms. Sightlines stay short, surfaces stay clear and the materials are chosen to work under both daylight and artificial light. The result is a lower floor that feels less exposed than the living level above it, even though the material language remains consistent.
Glass, stone-look tiles and a darker bathroom palette
The bathroom pairs large stone-look tiles with a black framed glass shower, and the surfaces are deliberately spare. A rounded basin cabinet sits under indirect light, which lifts the edge of the vanity and stops the darker finishes from becoming heavy. The tile face has enough texture to catch the light, so the room changes as you move through it. In the penthouse interior, this is one of the clearest examples of how a dark brown interior palette can still feel open when the lighting is handled carefully.
Details that keep the private zone legible
Glass partitions and black profiles mark out the shower area without turning it into a closed box. The shower wall stays transparent, the hardware stays slim, and the stone-look bathroom tiles continue across the room to keep the finish coherent at floor and wall level. Even the round vanity avoids sharp interruption, because its curved front softens the line of the room. The private spaces are quieter than the living floor, but they still carry the same precision in joinery and surface selection.
Colour accents against brown timber and daylight
The project uses brown as a base, then steps away from it with measured colour accents. You can see that approach in the seating, the wall finishes and the smaller objects that punctuate the interior. Nothing is overdrawn. Instead, the accents sit against the timber and the darker panels so the rooms do not settle into one monotone note. The daylight from the large windows does part of the work, but it is the mix of materials that keeps the penthouse interior readable across the two levels.
What makes the whole apartment feel coherent is not a single statement piece, but the way the surfaces repeat from one room to the next. Glass shows up in the windows, the shower and the balustrade; timber returns in the cabinetry and seating zones; stone appears in the bathroom; metal defines the frames and lighting. Those elements give the penthouse interior a clear structure, and they allow the open plan, the custom wall unit and the kitchen island to sit within one visual language without becoming repetitive.
From open living floor to private retreat
The strongest move in the project is the split between the upper living zone and the lower, quieter part of the apartment. On top, the long glazed edge brings the view into daily use. Below, the enclosed rooms and darker finishes slow everything down. That change in pace is felt in the way each level is furnished and lit. The penthouse interior does not rely on one grand gesture; it is built from linked decisions about light, enclosure and the exact position of each built-in element.
As a whole, the apartment reads as a two-level penthouse interior shaped by daylight and made precise through custom joinery. The kitchen island sets the social center, the custom wall storage keeps the living room open, and the bathroom finishes use glass and stone-look tiles to narrow the focus. Across both floors, the dark brown interior palette stays present but never heavy, because the windows keep reintroducing light at every turn.
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