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Bergman Design House Turns a London Apartment Into a Living Archive

05.21.26 | By
Bergman Design House Turns a London Apartment Into a Living Archive

An international family of four, described simply as collectors, commissioned Bergman Design House to design their second home in London. They came with a brief that was precise in its ambitions: refined, personal, and enduring. They wanted a space that would function as a living archive – where every object carried weight and every material had been chosen with accumulation in mind.

Bright, modern living room with a beige sofa, two textured armchairs, a marble coffee table, and skylights on a sloped wooden ceiling. A decorative cabinet stands by the wall.

That brief shaped everything visible in the apartment. The London studio co-founded by Marie Soliman and Albin Berglund, organized the 4000 sqft listed residence around the logic of the collection rather than the logic of decoration. While decoration fills a space, a collection builds over time, and the objects in this apartment were selected for their capacity to mean more in twenty years than they do today.

Modern lounge area with a tan armchair and ottoman, patterned wood wall featuring black abstract art, light wood flooring, and a blue sculptural ceiling light.

Materials played a similar part. Take travertine, for example, which improves with use. The stone’s open pores collect light differently as surfaces wear, and the material’s inherent variation becomes more legible over years of contact. It is one of a small category of materials that rewards the passage of time rather than resisting it, and Bergman Design House built an entire apartment around this principle.

A plush beige armchair sits next to a tall, glossy copper cabinet against a cream-toned wall with gold trim in a modern, minimalist room with slanted ceiling.

For the furnishings, Marcin Rusak’s bar cabinet – his practice suspends botanical matter, flowers and plant material, within resin – is an object whose surface contains a kind of preserved time. The three-dimensional wall installation by Swiss studio Beyond works through geometry and depth, holding attention across repeated encounters in a way that purely visual objects do not. Custom joinery by James Wellesley and stonework by Marco Pacitti connect the apartment to London’s specialist craft networks.

A modern dining room with a large oval table, six black chairs, tall shelving units, floor-to-ceiling curtains, and a geometric ceiling light fixture.

Bespoke plasters and natural marquetry cover the walls – both chosen, in Soliman’s framing, for tactile beauty and the ability to age gracefully. Fromental’s hand-painted wall coverings introduce a layer that only a human hand could produce, with the variation that comes from that process built into the surface from the start.

Modern living room with light stone walls, built-in fireplace, abstract wall art, sculptural shelves, plush chairs, and nested coffee tables under a skylight.

A decorative, metallic cabinet with open doors stands against a beige wall in a room with a sloped ceiling, next to a textured armchair and a small wooden side table.

Round table with a chess set surrounded by four upholstered chairs in a room with light curtains, wooden floor, and nature-themed wall mural. Geometric pendant light overhead.

A modern dining room with a large oval table, six black chairs, tall shelving units, floor-to-ceiling curtains, and a geometric ceiling light fixture.

A modern dining area with a round table, four black chairs, light wood floors, white paneled walls, and a large abstract green artwork above a wooden cabinet.

Curved cabinet with a brown floral pattern, chrome edges, and decorative handles stands against a beige wall with metallic vertical accents and a wall sconce.

A modern bedside table with two drawers stands next to a bed with white linens; several glass teacups hang above on transparent strings as decoration.

Neutral-toned bedroom with a large upholstered bed, white and beige bedding, two nightstands, a modern lamp, hanging glass decor, and a soft area rug.

A modern bedroom with a beige bed, a unique hanging glass pendant light, and a tall wooden wardrobe against neutral walls.

View more information on Bergman Design House’s website.

Photography by Vigo Jansons.

Leo Lei translates his passion for minimalism into his daily-updated blog Leibal. In addition, you can find uniquely designed minimalist objects and furniture at the Leibal Store.