
"From the entrance, the two-bedroom home opens directly onto a generous, south-facing living area that brings together lounge, dining, and workspace in a single volume. Transitions are marked with precision, most notably through a glass-paste frame that references modern architectural traditions but is treated here less as an ornament than as a functional device. Used on the kitchen island, dining table, and within the shower, the material helps articulate surfaces and edges."
"Plywood plays a central role, a recurring element in Ardalan's work, and here it establishes both visual coherence and spatial hierarchy. Its tone is drawn from the existing window frames, allowing the new interventions to converse with the original fabric of the apartment. The material runs continuously from the living room into the hallway and bedrooms, structuring volumes without relying on excess partitioning. Through careful cutting and alignment, drawer fronts and storage elements are integrated almost invisibly, producing homogeneous volumes that read as continuous planes."
On a high floor of a 1966 residential building in Paris' 11th arrondissement, a 65-square-meter through-apartment opens into a south-facing living volume combining lounge, dining, and workspace. A glass-paste frame marks transitions and functions on the kitchen island, dining table, and within the shower. A hallway leads to two bedrooms overlooking the courtyard, a shower room, and a separate toilet. Storage is embedded within bespoke furniture throughout. Plywood establishes visual coherence and spatial hierarchy, continuing from living room into hallway and bedrooms. Drawer fronts and storage are carefully cut and aligned to read as continuous planes.
#modernist-renovation #plywood-interiors #integrated-storage #glass-paste-detailing #paris-apartment
Read at designboom | architecture & design magazine
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