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Project of the Week

This week's instalment of the #SBIDinspire interior design series features a beautiful stucco-fronted Victorian residence situated in St John’s Wood, a tranquil village in the heart of London that sweeps along the side of Regent’s Park.

Company: Roselind Wilson Design

Project: Carlton Hill

Location: London, United Kingdom

The owners had reached a stage in their lives where their children had left home, and it had been over a decade since they previously renovated and refurbished the property. They felt it was time for a change as their personal style and lifestyle had changed dramatically and they wanted their home to equally reflect this.

Spanning 5 floors and circa 5,000 sq. ft, Roselind Wilson Design was appointed to refurbish, including the interior architecture, interior design, and project management of this five-bedroom, five-bathroom home. The space is arranged with the entertaining areas on the lower ground and ground floors and the bedrooms on the upper floors. A sweeping staircase allows for an elegant and graceful division between the entertainment and sleeping areas, which are all set against a backdrop of exquisitely balanced proportions, harmonious symmetry and classical detailing.

What was the client's brief? 

The brief comprised the complete refurbishment of the existing property; revising the current layout and making changes that would befit the client’s new lifestyle; which included both now working from home. The interior also needed to consider an entertaining space to accommodate up to 16 people on various occasions and had a requirement for a formal living and informal living space as well as a suitable dining area that could be an open plan as well as accommodate more intimate dining. The kitchen and all bathrooms were to be redesigned together with new services including integrated lighting, audiovisual and security services.

What inspired the interior design of the project? 

The interior design and interior architecture focus on creating harmony and balance within the space. Delicate furnishings and uncluttered décor allow for timeless elegance and graceful grandeur, while the colour palette showcases neutral blues, soft greys, dusky pinks and flat whites. This perfectly marries the interiors of handsome beauty, modern-day luxury and contemporary styling. The carefully considered interior design scheme is balanced – the furniture, fabrics and colour palette all work in harmony with the architectural backdrop within the property. The tiniest of details have been used to inject colour, texture or character to create an opulent interior – from incorporating striking cornicing to adorning the walls with elegant and sophisticated light fixtures.

What was the toughest hurdle your team overcame during the project?

Without doubt, it was trying to get the enormous 3 metre by 1.5 metre porcelain tiles we specified for the master bathroom into the first floor of the property! Working alongside our contractor on various options, we came to the solution of lifting them in through the window of the adjoining dressing room with the help of a cherry picker. A successful solution and fantastic result as the tiles look absolutely stunning on the wall.

What was your team’s highlight of the project?

It’s incredibly rewarding to experience first-hand a client’s reaction to their completed project – this is always a highlight for us. In this instance, the design journey and close collaboration between us and our client allowed them to realise their dream home - one that is elegant and sophisticated as well as warm and inviting.

Questions answered by Roselind Wilson, Owner & Creative Director of Roselind Wilson Design.

We hope you feel inspired by this week's design! Let us know what inspired you #SBIDinspire

If you missed last week's Project of the Week, featuring a residential villa, click here to see more.

Project of the Week

This week's instalment of the #SBIDinspire interior design series features a custom furniture design of a villa with a strong Italian vocation. Martini Interiors added essential Italian-inspired details for the luxurious kitchen, bathrooms and custom furniture.

Company: Martini Interiors

Project: Italian Style Villa

Location: Washington, DC

What was the client's brief? 

In this case the client of the interior design was the builder of the villa. The intent was clear from the beginning: to seek details of Italianisms to be applied to the entire villa. For this reason the famous Lecce stone has been imported for the cladding and the entrance has a reproduction of the vault of the Pantheon in Rome. Nothing can be more exciting than being able to express your being Italian in this context.

What inspired the interior design of the project? 

Italy, in form and substance. We wanted to give this residence all that Italy could offer through a meticulous attention to detail and a targeted insertion of classic Italian decorations.

What was the toughest hurdle your team overcame during the project?

If on the one hand we felt honoured to represent Italy in the capital of the united states in this villa, on the other hand we deeply felt its weight.

What was your team’s highlight of the project?

In our opinion, the bathroom and kitchen are elegant and sober, as well as showing unequivocally the idea of Italianity of the entire villa.

Questions answered by Roberto Guiotto, sales manager of Martini Interiors.

We hope you feel inspired by this week's villa design! Let us know what inspired you #SBIDinspire

If you missed last week's Project of the Week, featuring a residential design, click here to see more.

Project of the Week

This week's instalment of the #SBIDinspire interior design series features a residential kitchen design by Ledbury Studio. The brief was to design a kitchen for a large new-build property on the edge of the Peak District. The clients had been in their previous home for more than 30 years and retained strong ideas as to how they would require the design to work for them at their new home.

Company: Ledbury Studio

Project: Cheshire kitchen

Location: Cheshire, United Kingdom

What was the client's brief? 

The fundamental requirement was to create a relaxing and comfortable space that would instantly be the heart of their home. Our clients wanted a kitchen that could just as readily accommodate a relaxed evening for husband and wife, as play host to the regular charity events that form part of their extremely busy social lives. So, the brief was about incorporating multiple ‘cherished items’ into the design, whilst maintaining impeccable functionality and achieving a unique aesthetic.

What inspired the interior design of the project? 

The inspiration was actually quite complex. Firstly, the finish on the cupboard doors was inspired by our client’s extensive collection of antique pewter-ware. Working with 1.5mm-thick pewter, we created an aged finish which directly empathised with the pewter pieces. We also had to incorporate display areas into the design so these treasured items could be placed on show within the kitchen.

Our second major point of inspiration was to create a kitchen with a proper furniture feel. Of course, we needed all the functionality of the best-fitted kitchen, but we also needed to integrate several pieces of antique furniture – including a sizeable Georgian mahogany break-fronted display cupboard. I decided that I could best balance my design by focussing on the freestanding credentials of my furniture.

What was the toughest hurdle your team overcame during the project?

There were two main ones – the island and the breakfast store cupboard. The island was 3.6m long, and so required joins. We had chosen a Bianco Macaubas quartzite and it took two attempts to create the best joint. On the second, we were able to achieve an extremely precise match on the unique and complex veining of the stone. We did this by photographing the slabs digitally and then generating the best match via our software program before actually executing the cut. This was made at a slight diagonal to achieve minimum open joint – it’s less than 1mm finished.

Then on the breakfast store cupboard, the large all-pewter doors opened into pockets. Each of these doors weighs over 80kg, and the fact that we achieved smoothly opening doors in this situation is a testimony to the calibre of our design and our craftsmen. The doors look amazing and work beautifully.

What was your team’s highlight of the project?

This was the first project sold by Ledbury Studio, so it was a massive positive for us to pitch our designs and our product against the most established high-end kitchen brands in the UK, and to win our client’s trust to carry out their project. This high stayed with us throughout the project, right to the point when the client moved in.

Questions answered by Charlie Smallbone, founder of Ledbury Studio.

We hope you feel inspired by this week's residential design! Let us know what inspired you #SBIDinspire

If you missed last week's Project of the Week, featuring a modern kitchen remodel, click here to see more.

Project of the Week

This week's instalment of the #SBIDinspire interior design series features a residential kitchen design. The client wanted a space that seemed large and really easy to move around in, without feeling too empty, and definitely not too grand. Mark Taylor Design worked on this project for 12 weeks, inserting beams, building a glass wall, moving all plumbing and fitting a kitchen. This included designing, building and fitting a mobile island as well as flooring. The end result transformed the existing, dark kitchen into a light, open-plan area fit for entertaining and relaxing.

2019 SBID Awards Category: KBB Design Sponsored by: Vitra UK

Practice: Mark Taylor Design

Project: Skinny Shaker-style Kitchen

Location: Buckinghamshire

What was the client's brief? 

The clients wanted a space that seemed large and really easy to move around in, without feeling too empty, and definitely not too grand; a modern look, but not flat, or minimalist. They also wanted an island, but one for many people to stand around, not something small. It should almost create a showpiece for the kitchen. There was some debate about exactly where this should be. They wanted a table that would seat 8 to 10 people max, near the patio garden at the back of the kitchen. It was important to create a sense of light in what was a really dark space, with low ceilings and not a lot of sun. They wanted a pantry, to avoid food in cupboards, and if possible, wanted a french larder fridge, if it would fit. Ultimately, they wanted to use a combination of paint in the kitchen area and wallpaper in the sitting area, to differentiate the spaces.

What inspired the interior design of the project? 

A couple of things; a photograph of a 150-year-old french furniture piece which the client fell in love with, and which formed the basis of the moveable island, and the feeling of space and cleanness that a flat, concrete style floor provides in good industrial working kitchens. Just these 2 elements set us off. We had also recently designed a skinny shaker door and wanted to include this on the base units. Finally, to try and create different spaces that complimented each other. We looked at the romantic nature of a Welsh dresser, dating back 250 years, that was already in place in the old kitchen and created a warm, wallpapered area around that.

What was the toughest hurdle you/your team faced during the project?

Poor light and different, low ceiling heights made lighting a challenge. We put in place 5 different levels of lighting; floor lights to illuminate the walls and reflect off the white ceiling, mid-level lighting on the walls for creating a warm, soft ambience, task lighting placed in the ceiling above the work surface, LED linear lighting recessed into ceiling lighting channels to cast an even light across the ceiling, and; a window wall comprising 2 sets of bifold doors at the back of the kitchen, where the maximum amount of natural light could be brought into the dining space.

We were also tasked with positioning the french larder fridge in an under-stairs recess which was slightly too shallow. Our builders cleverly removed a small portion of the stair winder to accommodate this and it looks made-to-measure as a result. Another challenge was getting light into and through the walk-in pantry, so that it would feel separate from, but connected to the main kitchen was achieved by using two porthole windows in the swing doors.

What was your highlight of the project?

Completing the project, including building work to insert beams and build a glass wall, moving all plumbing to create a new utility room and larder, building a snug, designing, building and fitting a kitchen, including a mobile island and flooring – all in 12 weeks, ready for Christmas!

Did you enter the project into the SBID International Design Awards? If so, why?

Yes. Our Skinny Shaker-style kitchen is the newest addition to our MeThD custom kitchen collection and it features a beautifully modern take on a Shaker-style door. Opting for base units along one wall without any wall units created a stylish kitchen with clean lines and a more modern look. To add to the look, we designed and created a bespoke movable island unit. The end result transformed the existing, dark kitchen into a light, open-plan area where entertaining and relaxing would be key.

Questions answered by Mark Taylor, Director at Mark Taylor Design.

We hope you feel inspired by this week's residential design! Let us know what inspired you #SBIDinspire

If you missed last week's Project of the Week, featuring a Parisian-inspired hotel public space, click here to see more.

Project of the Week

This week's instalment of the #SBIDinspire interior design series features a hotel public space redesign. Virserius Studio completed the second phase of the redesign of the Renaissance Paris La Défense in Summer 2018. This involved a partial renovation of the lobby, removing the existing executive lounge, and creating a destination restaurant. Virserius Studio took into consideration the owner’s concerns by blending of older existing elements like the classical towers while incorporating more contemporary design elements. The aim was for the hotel to not just be for guests but for it to be a place the public in this busy section of Paris can incorporate into their busy day, whether it’s grabbing a coffee from the brasserie kiosk or a glass of wine on the way home or meeting on important matters during the day.

SBID Awards Category: Hotel Public Space Sponsored by Viva Lagoon

Practice: Virserius Studio

Project: Renaissance Paris La Defense Hotel

Location: Paris, France

What was the client's brief? 

The brief for the project was to reflect the La Défense neighborhood and its surroundings through carefully curated art and lighting.  This involved a partial renovation of the lobby, removing the existing executive lounge, and creating a destination restaurant. We wanted the hotel to not just be for guests but for it to be a place the public in this busy section of Paris can incorporate into their busy day, whether it’s grabbing a coffee from the brasserie kiosk or a glass of wine on the way home, or meeting on important matters during the day.

What inspired the interior design of the project? 

First, we wanted to pay homage to the art and fashion of Paris. However, we wanted to add elements reflecting the landscape of the beautiful French countryside, located not too far away.

What was the toughest hurdle your team overcame during the project?

Renaissance Paris La Défense belongs to 3 political districts, which presented a logistical and construction challenge. We had to file permits in each district; some were liberal, and some were more lenient. There were many stakeholders, complicating the process.

What was your highlight of the project?

Light sculpture that spans 3 floors, focal point 50 ft, visible from everywhere, custom designed by V/S to connect all three floors to penetrate all three level. It’s handblown glass representing algae, but more like snowflake or flower.

Why did you enter the SBID Awards?

A design excellence award distinction from SBID is one of the most prestigious a firm can receive in this industry. With each completed project, we want to present our work to a jury of peers, and recognition is always appreciated.

Questions answered by Therese Virserius, Founder and Lead Designer at Virserius Studio.

We hope you feel inspired by this week's hotel design! Let us know what inspired you #SBIDinspire

If you missed last week's Project of the Week, featuring a residential design making use of its surrounding nature, click here to see more.

Project of the Week

This week's instalment of the #SBIDinspire interior design series features a lakeside residence designed for an active couple approaching retirement. The client sought to create a home that celebrated the environmentally protected nature surrounding them, where they could enjoy aging in place while granting space for another generation to visit and entertain around lake life. Nature is brought indoors through the extensive glass and is emphasised by the mixed material palette including reclaimed wood, granite, and earth-toned walls. The home’s incorporation of sustainable and accessible design elements ensures that Arcadia House will be the heart of the family for generations to come.

SBID Awards Category: Residential Design Over £1 Million Sponsored by THG Paris

Practice: Visnick & Caulfield

Project: Arcadia House

Location: Massachusetts, United States

What was the client's brief? 

The client wanted a home that would act as a gathering place for family and close friends. They felt the home should celebrate its natural surroundings and experience nature indoors. Most importantly, the clients, an active couple, are nearing retirement and wanted their space to accommodate aging in place.

What inspired the interior design of the project? 

The space is inspired by its immediate surroundings, by being immersed in nature, and by the site’s relationship to the water.

What was the toughest hurdle your team overcame during the project?

Working within the constraints of the environment proved challenging. The design and construction of the home contended with multiple setbacks surrounding the water, undeveloped land, and sloping topography throughout its uniquely shaped lot. The team overcame the environmental protections in place by using them as interest-driving constraints to derive the form and placement of the house.

What was your highlight of the project?

Seeing the client fully immersed in their home is immensely rewarding. The highlight of the project is seeing it become a setting that we as designers envisioned – one which brings together family and friends.

Why did you enter the SBID Awards?

We were inspired by the variety and quality of work at the SBID Awards, and hope to take part in the field with such international talent.

Questions answered by Cora Visnick, Architect at Visnick & Caulfield.

We hope you feel inspired by this week's residential design! Let us know what inspired you #SBIDinspire

If you missed last week's Project of the Week, featuring a 1960’s inspired hotel, click here to see more.

Project of the Week

This week's instalment of the #SBIDinspire interior design series features a 1960's inspired Hotel Public Space. 2019 SBID Awards Finalist, Smallwood, had the challenge of ensuring a strong arrival moment for guests, given that the hotel entrance shares a lobby with the office tower and the residences. It was therefore important to give the guest a strong visual impact and to zone the arrival experience of a Waldorf Astoria that could easily compete against the multiple design languages of the adjacent office and residential lobby spaces.

SBID Awards Category: Hotel Public Space Sponsored by Viva Lagoon

Practice: Smallwood

Project: Waldorf Astoria Dubai International Financial Centre

Location: Dubai, United Arab Emirates (UAE)

What was the client's brief? 

The client’s brief called for a mid-modern approach, and unusually for Dubai, without any cultural references to the locale but a design that reflected the styling of the exterior architecture.

What inspired the interior design of the project? 

The client gave the styling of the American television series “Mad Men” as the design direction, so a strong New York sixties feel to the interior architecture and FF&E was used throughout.

What was the toughest hurdle your team overcame during the project?

To create a series of zoned spaces across Level 18 that prevented square meterage from being lost to circulation. With a total interior width of 25metres and a length of over 80m, Smallwood created ‘rooms within rooms’ so that the spaces interconnected, obviating the need for multiple circulation routes.

What was your highlight of the project?

The opportunity to design an interior of a hotel in the Middle East with a cool aesthetic very different from the more typical hotel projects in the region.

Why did you enter the SBID Awards?

We believe SBID is a highly prestigious design awards competition and it is a great way to showcase our new projects across the region to both operators and developers.

Questions answered by Joshua Rayner Roger Judd, Interior Design Director at Smallwood.

We hope you feel inspired by this week's Hotel Design! Let us know what inspired you #SBIDinspire

If you missed last week's Project of the Week, featuring a charming Chicago Hotel, click here to see more.

Project of the Week

This week's instalment of the #SBIDinspire interior design series features a hotel public space designed by Studio K Creative to feel like a beautiful, private estate. Hotel Zachary is inspired by Wrigley Field’s original architect, Zachary Taylor Davis. The charming floor plan includes a central bar, which creates an intuitive path that takes guests on a walk reminiscent of Davis’ own home by incorporating his family heirlooms, repurposing his architectural sketches into key art pieces and paying homage to his love story with details that honour his wife, Alma, and their children. Hotel Zachary is an authentic design that represents a piece of Chicago history.

SBID Awards Category: Hotel Public Space Sponsored by Viva Lagoon

Practice: Studio K Creative

Project: Hotel Zachary

Location: Illinois, United States

What was the client's brief? 

With a location across the street from Wrigley Field, the client envisioned a hotel inspired by the original architect of the ballpark, Zachary Taylor Davis. They approached Studio K with the desire to create a lobby that would act as a warm and inviting community space that felt authentic to Chicago’s history.  The goal was to establish an approachable, versatile home base for visitors looking for a classic Chicago neighbourhood experience.

What inspired the interior design of the project? 

Hotel Zachary is inspired by Wrigley Field’s original architect, Zachary Taylor Davis.

What was the toughest hurdle your team overcame during the project?

The greatest design challenge was creating a space adaptable enough for guests to enjoy a cozy breakfast, important business lunch or hip happy hour all within the same central area. The lobby had to move seamlessly from day to night. To achieve this transition, we worked meticulously with lighting designers to get the levels correct for different hours and functions, effectively creating varying atmospheres depending on the time of day.

What was your highlight of the project?

Since this was a legacy project, our team worked very closely with Zachary’s family to ensure the design was genuine and deeply personal. It was very touching working on a project that involved a person with historical significance.

We met with his family descendants, went through their photographs, his original sketches, his original blueprints and assorted artefacts that were passed down, including love letters between Zachary and his wife, Alma. All of these pieces were either incorporated into key art through the space or inspired various design choices. There was a lot of storytelling weaved through the process which made the outcome truly authentic.

Why did you enter the SBID Awards?

Hotel Zachary means a great deal to the city of Chicago since it celebrates a piece of history and elevated the neighbourhood around it. We are very proud that our first completed public space in a hotel has received such an overwhelmingly positive reaction from locals and visitors alike, and wanted to bring it into an international market.

7 Hotel Public Space - Studio K Creative

Questions answered by Karen Herold, Principal and Alicia Kelly, Senior Designer at Studio K Creative.

We hope you feel inspired by this week's Hotel Design! Let us know what inspired you #SBIDinspire

If you missed last week's Project of the Week, featuring a luxurious Italian Villa, click here to see more.

Project of the Week

This week's instalment of the #SBIDinspire interior design series features a luxury interior design which reflects the elegance and exclusiveness of its location. Since the end of the 19th Century, Gardone has been one of the most exclusive places on Lake Garda. Landau + Kindelbacher, used a range of colours rich in contrast, drawing influence from traditional stimuli: the aquamarine of Lake Garda, the painted timbers of the elegant Riva boats as well as the lemon-yellow touches from the surrounding lemon orchards.

The high-class furnishings and fittings and the incomparable setting beside Lake Garda, assure the attraction of the project. From everywhere on the site, one has a fantastic view of the lake. Both the architecture and the interior design have succeeded, with their individual designs for the luxury villas, in meeting the highest demands of the future owners.

SBID Awards Category: Residential Design Over £1 Million Sponsored by THG Paris

Practice: Landau + Kindelbacher Architekten - Innenarchitekten

Project: Villa at Lake Garda

Location: Brescia, Italy

What was the client's brief? 

The brief was to design a modern luxury Villa on this breathtaking building site at Gardone Sopra overlooking the Lake Garda catching in all those beautiful views over the landscape. The goal was to fuse interior design, architecture and landscape design into one consistent Project.

What inspired the interior design of the project? 

The inspiration came from all the southern colors you will find around the Lake Garda, the lemon trees with their Limonaia structures and the mahogany RIVA Yachts and finally the color of the water and the sky.

What was the toughest hurdle your team overcame during the project?

The very short timeline and just to get the design team physically on the building site, taking the James Bond proven Gardesana route on the east bank of Lake Garda.

What was your highlight of the project?

The whole design team was invited to join the Grand Opening Party of the Villa and we could see that all our ideas had worked out perfectly.

Why did you enter the SBID Awards?

The quality of the SBID Awards is really outstanding and we think it is one of the most prestigious awards within the interior design community.

Questions answered by Gerhard Landau, Managing Partner, Landau + Kindelbacher.

We hope you feel inspired by this week's luxury design! Let us know what inspired you #SBIDinspire

If you missed last week's Project of the Week, featuring a minimalist residential extension, click here to see more.

Project of the Week

This week's instalment of the #SBIDinspire interior design series features a light and airy residential design. This large and comfortable house had already been extended 10 years earlier, but this was demolished to provide an even larger replacement, featuring a study area, extra living space and a small service kitchen hidden behind a full-height sliding door.

In keeping with the calm and minimal tone requested by the client, SBID Accredited Design Practise, Richard Dewhurst Interior Architecture chose a muted colour palette was used throughout the house. The odd burst of colour was, however, tactfully used in the smaller spaces of the house, such as the bathroom and study.

Practice: Richard Dewhurst Interior Architecture

Project: Balham House Extension

Location: Balham, United Kingdom

What was the client's brief? 

The brief was to design a light and airy rear extension that didn’t simply feel like a white box grafted onto the back of the house and that was both calming and minimal. She also wanted a very impressive and modern kitchen, but one that was easy to use and could hide the mess as she readily admitted that cooking wasn’t really her thing!

In general, my client had quite a conservative approach to the project, but thankfully she was very happy for me to get creative with the guest loo, which proved to be fun.

What inspired the interior design of the project? 

The main driving factor behind this design was my enthusiasm for clerestory windows and the calmness and clarity of light they bring to a space. Having seen plenty of them in other buildings, I was excited to finally get the opportunity to build one.

What was the toughest hurdle your team overcame during the project?

The clerestory window feature was more complex to design and detail than I'd originally thought, meaning that I had to work closely with the window manufacturer and structural engineer to ensure that it functioned well and looked good.

Also, I desperately tried to convince my client that she should replace her sixty-foot long fake grass lawn with the real thing, as I’m getting increasingly frustrated and upset by the environmental damage this stuff causes to the local ecology, especially when considering the role city back gardens play in creating wildlife corridors in urban areas. Unfortunately, this was a battle I couldn't win.

What was your highlight of the project?

I was so pleased that my client loved the clerestory window and the guest loo as it always surprises her guests; they simply don't expect to see the stretch ceiling and seamless walls!

Questions answered by Richard Dewhurst, founder, Richard Dewhurst Interior Architecture.

We hope you feel inspired by this week's residential design! Let us know what inspired you #SBIDinspire

If you missed last week's Project of the Week, featuring a unique facility designed to surpass all expectations of a traditional care home, click here to see more.

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