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10 homes that feature colour blocking
This blog post compiles a selection of 10 residential projects that effectively utilize colour blocking to enhance their interiors. The collection, derived from popular images on Pinterest, showcases how architects and designers employ distinct blocks of colour to introduce personality, define spaces, and create visual interest within homes.
The first example, House for Agnes in the UK by Tigg Coll Architects, features exposed I-beams painted bright red, injecting a playful character into an otherwise traditional London house. R2 Studio's Kennington House, also in the UK, incorporates blue, green, and yellow elements in its kitchen and a stairwell that transitions from red to orange, brightening a previously dark Victorian property.
Apartment AB in Austria, designed by Kombinat, uses coloured tiles to delineate storage areas, with pastel green tiles in the kitchen and blue and pink tiles in a hallway. In Mexico, Studio Jakob Gomez's Chipinque Monterrey apartment features a bold yellow storage unit that acts as a focal point and transition between living spaces.
RA Projects introduced a striking blue steel staircase in the Fin House for Roksanda Ilincic in the UK, creating a vivid contrast with the minimalist interior. Studio Alexander Fehre's Apartment Filippo in London includes a fixed dining area with crimson seating that stands out against monochrome wallpaper.
Piso Pereiv44 in Spain, by Miel Arquitectos, is characterized by various bold colour accents and a continuous wall punctuated by fluorescent green storage spaces. AKTA's Basanaviciaus apartment in Lithuania showcases colourful furniture, such as green kitchen cabinets, a blue velvet sofa, and a red textured chair, all complemented by black-metal details.
Henning Stummel's self-designed Tin House in the UK features warm-hued rooms illuminated by skylights, with rich orange cabinetry and walls that harmonize with the home's russet steel cladding. Finally, Naturehumaine's Canari House in Canada, a transformed 1930s building, uses a dramatic black and yellow staircase with geometric cut-outs as a central, colour-blocked circulation element.
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