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10 Unique Interior Design Features To Steal From Our Home Tours
This article highlights ten unique and inspiring interior design features observed in various Singaporean homes, drawing examples from a YouTube series. It demonstrates how homeowners have incorporated distinct elements to personalize their living spaces, ranging from HDB flats to penthouses and landed properties.
The first design explored is a walk-up apartment featuring a pottery studio within the living area and a sizeable balcony transformed into an outdoor hangout spot. This setup challenges conventional dining room usage in Singaporean homes and encourages dedicated spaces for hobbies, even in urban environments. Following this, the article examines a "greenhouse" dining room in an older 1970s unit, showcasing how to leverage elongated layouts to create visual connections with a garden and maintain sunlit, yet cool, interiors by working with the climate rather than against it. This design also highlights a creative use of partitions as visual features rather than complete flow blockers.
The third feature discusses an HDB flat where a balcony has been converted into a sky garden with movable glass panels, effectively expanding the living space and demonstrating the potential for sophisticated design even in public housing. This contrasts with a penthouse featuring a playful "treehouse" loft, complete with skylights and an accessible roof area for relaxation and dining, emphasizing the concept of a penthouse as an appended house rather than just an upper-floor unit.
Next, the article delves into an Indochine-inspired living room that masterfully employs different tiles to subtly demarcate areas without relying on walls, preserving spaciousness and natural ventilation. This design underscores the importance of historical understanding when executing themed interiors. Another outdoor design, a Zen garden in a terrace house, is presented as an alternative to traditional potted plant arrangements, offering a rustic and natural feel in shaded areas, contrasting with the common practice of creating indoor Zen spaces.
The seventh design marvel is a second-story lap pool with an underwater window, suggesting a unique architectural element that adds visual interest both to the pool and the room below, with potential applications for aquatic enthusiasts. This emphasizes an organic approach to pool design, integrating it more seamlessly with the surrounding environment. An unconventional ramp around the exterior of a bungalow is featured, created to provide children with ample play space on a smaller outdoor plot, thereby making the most of limited outdoor areas and offering a dynamic, multi-level play environment. This innovative solution provides an alternative to conventional grassy play areas.
The penultimate design is a split-coloured kitchen, which embraces individuality by using contrasting color palettes to create a visually dynamic space that appears different from various angles, avoiding uniformity without expensive gimmicks. This kitchen also features a rounded island that softens the room's overall aesthetic. Finally, an HDB flat owned by an architect showcases an entryway carved out to serve as a balcony, bringing a touch of landed living to an apartment. This feature, combined with an industrial-themed interior and street art collection, illustrates how extensive personalization can be achieved in public housing for long-term residents. The article concludes by encouraging readers to explore more design ideas and property reviews for inspiration.
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