
René Desjardins has designed an interior design for a penthouse apartment in downtown Montreal, Quebec. The space consisted of a large 3,300 sq. ft. unit assembled from two penthouses on the 23rd floor. As a point of departure, space intended for a corridor to one of the penthouses could now be used to house the mechanical and electrical systems. This meant that the apartment could take the form of...

Pascal Arquitectos has designed an interior design Nisha Bar-Lounge in Mexico City, Mexico. This project emerged from the intention of creating entertainment space for adults of 30 years and older. The place houses a lounge and a restaurant-bar is connected to the lobby. The lobby, especially in dark tones since covered with black metal plates and “terrazzo” floor, which is illuminated...

Filipe Melo Oliveira has designed an interior design to renew an apartment in Lisbon, Portugal. The existing conditions of the apartment contained spectacular views of Monsanto and the Tagus river. This became a focal point to highlight during the redesign, along with improvements in acoustic and thermal comfort. Follow the break for more photographs of these thoughtfully redesigned interior spaces....

Essentia Design has designed an office interior design for Dentsu London. The building is an award winning development by Amanda Levete which the Dentsu team have already christened the “spaceship” (Tokyo HQ is the mothership!). This design is to create interiors that sympathetic to the curvaceous exterior of the building and provide an environment of high-tech minimalist Japanese where they can...

ROW Studio has designed a modern interior in Mexico City, Mexico. The first training facility called Espacio C (C Space -C for the initials of Coca Cola, Training, Quality, Commitment and Creativity in Spanish-) is located at the Mixcoac Distribution Center on the southwestern area of Mexico City. It includes three separate rooms that can be joined together for common activities, a mediateque, snacks...

Zecc Architecten has designed interiors for a house in Utrecht, The Netherlands. The balcony at the organ is maintained and extended in the shape of a organizing element, free in the space. This element defines the different living spaces, like living, cooking and studying, in the chapel. A new spatial hierarchy is created by the asymmetric placing of the organizing element. The object is kept very...