Living Area: 110 sq.m.
Details: 3 Bedrooms, 2 Bathrooms, 2 Parking spaces
Modern home design emphasizes clean lines and geometric shapes. No more are features such as arches, ornate columns, window shutters, or any outlandish ornamentation.
In place of these features that at one point spoke of luxury and wealth are simple shapes and intentional asymmetry. The opulence of the past is no more.
Modern design also favors strong horizontal and vertical elements, creating a sense of hierarchy while somehow both standing out in stark contrast and blending in with the natural surroundings of the landscaping and neighborhood.
Ultimately, the aim of modern design is to simplify the home, emphasize function, and remove any unnecessary frills.
With the constant distraction and bombardment of technology and stress in our modern lives, simplicity is a calming and welcoming moment in our homes.
One of our favorite features of modern design is the inclusion of large, unadorned windows.
Working in tandem with the simplicity of the building design, installing large windows of various sizes and shapes removes the spotlight from artwork or busy wallpaper and sets the focus of a room on the natural surroundings of your home.
The natural sunlight will fill your home with glow and warmth, leaving you and your family happier and more excited to take on the day than a darker room might.
Perhaps the defining characteristic of modern interior design is the open concept floor plan. Removing the walls that once separated the common rooms of the home further emphasizes the trends of simplicity, natural light, and openness.
While bedrooms are still a private retreat, the modern home is built for families to be together while those large windows shroud the entire home in sunlight.
In these open concepts the family can feel together even while the kids are playing by the television, dinner is being prepared over the stove, and emails are being sent from the dining table.
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Credit: Primnara Home