Curved thresholds, textured walls and a steady beige palette reshape this Bukit Batok five-room flat into a tactile, quietly immersive home designed for long-term living.
Ascend Design reimagines a once-gloomy apartment as a warm, timber-wrapped retreat shaped around daily rituals, a dedicated coffee corner and the quiet calm of Amayadori.
Balancing Japandi simplicity with lived-in warmth, this home uses soft curves, layered wood tones, and smart carpentry integration to shape an inviting family sanctuary.
Builders Plus elevates a typical HDB BTO layout with soft curves and tactile finishes, proving that understated design can still be deeply functional in a family home.
Minimal yet deeply intentional, this home blends spatial clarity with Japanese design cues – from pebbled thresholds to layered spaces.
Urban Delineation reconfigures a dated HDB layout into a sensory-led home with a calming and balanced spatial flow.
By embracing natural materials, soft curves and functional design, Intheory Design transformed an ordinary apartment into a nature-inspired sanctuary for a couple.
With its sculptural arches, airy spaces, and curated materials, this corner terrace designed by Uncommon Studio offers a harmonious blend of calm and modern elegance.
A place to relax, read and meditate, this HDB flat in Tampines has been transformed by Plush Interior Design into an idyllic retreat for two.
The husband wanted dark colours, the wife light, so Third Avenue Studio delivered both with a harmonious modern Japandi design.
Right Angle Studio forms new possibilities within the rigid layout of a small 592-square-foot apartment.
Darwin Interior’s calming approach to the style and design of this young couple’s home yields a dreamy escape from everyday life.
A young newlywed couple gave the designers at ASOLIDPLAN the unusual task of designing their home based on a piece of music called Rivers Wide.
The allure of wabi-sabi lies in its celebration of beauty in imperfection. Here’s how you can build a life and home that’s centred around in this concept.
The wabi-sabi inspired home of interior designer Gabriel Ng and his wife Cheryl is a peaceful sanctuary with some truly unexpected features.
With clever storage, flexible sliding panels and a coordinated palette, this flat reflects its owners’ desire for a calming home and flexible lifestyle.