The Ghent residence rejects sterile accessibility in favor of warmth, dignity, and a deeply humane spatial experience designed to evolve alongside its inhabitants.
The site's buildable area was cut in half — so KWK Promes adapted its two-story residential scheme to fantastic effect.
Ravi Raj renovates a historic early 20th-century stone house in Mount Airy, Croton-on-Hudson, restoring and extending its material logic through a contemporary interior.
With a double-height volume and carefully framed openings, Aranda\Lasch transforms a compact New York apartment into viewport for light and landscape.
For his own family home in Melbourne, architect Paul Conrad begins with interior architecture—crafting a sequence of spaces where light, material, and proportion quietly shape everyday life.
Swee Design transforms a grand Federation home into a vibrant living gallery, proving that historic architecture can embrace contemporary color, collaboration, and personality.
Designed by Marcela Cure, this Pinecrest residence trades flash for finesse, using natural materials and muted tones to create a serene, family-centered retreat.
AAHA Studio reimagines the Pine Ave Residence in El Segundo as a calm, light-filled home where architecture reframes loss into renewal.
Our top 10 Skim Milk features from 2025 prove that when architecture is stripped to its essence, designers can still create quietly powerful spaces.
Interior designer Marianne Tiegen transforms Chalet Cocagne using rustic details with contemporary restraint for something powerfully cozy.
Balancing restraint with warmth, Freudenberger Design Studio transforms an existing Palm Springs home into a gallery-like haven for art + its admirers.
The recently renovated CM G1 House by designers Willett and Ome Dezin is an ode to Los Angeles and an emotional landscape made for living.
Architect Brian O’Brian and interior designer Gillian Segal synergize to update a Victorian-era residence tempered with contemporary Art Deco details.
We check in with The Modern House UK, founded by Albert Hill and Matt Gibberd, on their approach to real estate storytelling.
We caught up with Brad Ford whose visionary work perfectly compliments Shigeru Ban’s modern aesthetic of the Cast Iron House.