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Eight living rooms that are dominated by giant sofas
The article presents a lookbook showcasing eight living rooms where oversized sofas serve as the central design element. These living rooms feature couches that are significantly larger than standard furniture, often making a bold design statement within their respective spaces. This collection is part of a series that provides visual inspiration from Dezeen's archive, building on previous lookbooks that explored paper lamps, sculptural furniture, and 1970s decor in living spaces.
The first example is the DN Apartment in Brazil, renovated by BC Arquitetos. It features an olive-green, sickle-shaped sofa by Jader Almeida in an open-plan living room, set against a backdrop of classic Brazilian art and furniture. This apartment, part of a 1970s building, also includes a Petala coffee table by Jorge Zalzupin and a bronze head sculpture by Florian Raiss, blending modern design with historical context.
Next, the Canal Saint-Martin apartment in France, designed by Rodolphe Parente, showcases a sculptural vintage sofa that wraps around a pearlescent coffee table. This Parisian apartment, a Haussmann-era classic, integrates contemporary art with original architectural features. A black-and-white graphic rug completes the living area, highlighting the juxtaposition of styles.
From Scottsdale, Arizona, the Hotel Valley Ho, renovated by 3rd Story, incorporates generous U-shaped sofas with colorful upholstery in its suites. Anissa Mendil's design aimed to complement the hotel's modernist architecture with contemporary furniture, creating inviting and comfortable spaces.
The Gale Apartment in Brazil, by Memola Estudio, uses a super-long sofa to anchor a living room with double-height ceilings, a mosaic wall, and an extensive art collection. Despite vibrant wall hangings, the sofa maintains a neutral color palette for the room, balancing various design elements within the São Paulo apartment renovation.
Gabriele Salini's G-Rough hotel in Rome, located in a 17th-century palazzo, merges historic elegance with Italian modernism. The entertaining spaces feature an extra-deep sofa that can also function as a spare bed, serving as an intriguing focal point that reflects the hotel's rough-yet-refined aesthetic.
In Madrid, the Radikal Klassisk apartment by Puntofilipino offers an unconventional take on Danish design with an intense color and material palette. A curving NORR11 couch, composed of three separate parts upholstered in different fabrics, dominates the sparsely furnished living room, contributing to a brooding atmosphere.
The Breezeway House in Australia, designed by David Boyle Architect, features a built-in sofa that lines the living room wall. This design, reminiscent of patio furniture, blurs the lines between indoor and outdoor spaces, a theme continued throughout the holiday home on the Australian east coast.
Finally, the Design Space AlUla 2024 exhibition in Italy, a collaboration between Sabine Marcelis and architecture studio Cloud for Milan design week, presented a massive modular seating area by Hall Haus. This piece, which bears similarities to Pierre Paulin's Ensemble Dune, was one of several large-scale sofa installations seen in Milan that year, including a yellow sofa platform by Panter & Tourron, demonstrating contemporary trends in flexible and expansive seating designs.
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