For our latest lookbook, we've selected eight dining rooms from the Dezeen archive where wooden panelling was used to create cosy, earthy environments with an organic feel.
From South America to Europe, these wood-panelled dining rooms serve as focal points in the interiors and create social spaces for residents and guests.
Whether they're made from timber, pine or plywood, the wooden finishes on these statement walls and ceilings have been used to create welcoming environments with peaceful atmospheres.
This is the latest in our lookbooks series, which provides visual inspiration from Dezeen's archive. For more inspiration see previous lookbooks featuring homes with focal point wardrobes, statement headboards and homes with pergolas.
Photography is by Fran Parente and image production is by Victor Correa
ER Apartment, Brazil, Pascali Semerdjian Arquitetos
This apartment in São Paulo has an exposed concrete ceiling and uses natural materials, such as walnut, bronze, onyx and stone in its furnishings and finishes.
Pascali Semerdjian Arquitetos used vertical timber cladding, local art and furniture by Brazilian architects and designers Oscar Niemeyer and Claudia Moreira Salles in the dining room to make the space "deeply Brazilian and vividly cosmopolitan".
Find out more about ER Apartment ›
Photography is by Eric Petschek
Carroll Gardens Townhouse, US, Starling Architecture and Emily Lindberg Design
Starling Architecture and Emily Lindberg Design combined two units in a Brooklyn townhouse to create this family home. The townhouse features Belgian white oak on the flooring and along the corridor, stairs, mudroom, kitchen and dining area.
The New York-based studios used neutral tones to decorate the five-story house. In the dining room, wooden cabinets and decorative lamellas match the floor and ceiling.
Find out more about Carroll Gardens Townhouse ›
Dragon Flat, UK, Tsuruta Architects
Artificial intelligence (AI) was used to design the patterns engraved on plywood panels that decorate the dining room of the Dragon Flat in London's Notting Hill. Tsuruta Architects used a CNC router – a computer-controlled cutting machine – to engrave a pattern of the River Thames on the wall.
The architecture studio also updated the two-level maisonette to include a walk-in wardrobe and tatami room, which features an engraved design on its panelled walls.
Find out more about Dragon Flat ›
Photography is by David Grandorge
Homerton College, UK, Feilden Fowles
Homerton College at the University of Cambridge includes a dining hall by London architecture studio Feilden Fowles made from concrete, timber and 3,200 faience tiles.
The building, which was constructed with chestnut-laminated timber frames and clerestory windows, features a larger eating space, a smaller eating room, the kitchen and staff amenities.
It was designed to celebrate handcrafting techniques and contemporary construction and engineering.
Find out more about Homerton College ›
Photography is by Roland Halbe
House in El Peumo, Chile, Cristián Izquierdo Lehmann
This house, designed by Cristián Izquierdo Lehmann, centres around an open-plan kitchen and dining room with a vaulted ceiling that is used for cooking, dining and socialising.
A minimalist decor compliments the dramatic ceiling, with red stools used for dining and a bookcase lining the wall.
Located in El Peumo, Chile, the house was clad with laminated pine and features concrete floors and large windows for the owners to enjoy the green exterior.
Find out more about House in El Peumo ›
Another Seedbed, US, Future Projects
The Another Seedbed loft in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, serves as both a home and performance space for its owner. To function as both, the space is predominately open, with hidden rooms located around the apartment.
Warm pine walls mark the dining space, which features a complementary red angular table and wooden sculptural chairs.
Other walls in the loft are covered in hand-troweled earthen clay plaster, blue penny-round tiles and floor-to-ceiling shelving.
Find out more about Another Seedbed ›
Photography is by Art Gray
Stone Creek Camp, US, Andersson-Wise Architects
US-based Andersson-Wise Architects designed the Stone Creek Camp in Big Fork, Montana, as a family retreat of cabins and cottages.
While it is wood-clad, the kitchen and dining area does not feature traditional panelled walls. Instead, one wall is made from wooden logs that have been assembled to create an unusual wall with a highly textured surface.
The ceiling was clad in wooden panels that match the floorboards in the home.
Find out more about Stone Creek Camp ›
Photography is by Marc Goodwin
Geilo Valley Cabin, Norway, Lund Hagem
Panelled with blackened timber, this Norwegian ski cabin shelters residents from harsh weather conditions and offers panoramic views of the Geilo Valley. The cabin's exterior concrete walls have also been tinted black to reflect the interior panels.
The walls and ceiling of the dining room use the same timber cladding, matching the kitchen island to create a cosy, coherent atmosphere.
"The dark tone allows the nature outside to come closer and creates a darkness that contrasts with the white winter landscape," said the project's architects Lund Hagem.
Find out more about Geilo Valley Cabin ›
This is the latest in our lookbooks series, which provides visual inspiration from Dezeen's archive. For more inspiration see previous lookbooks featuring homes with focal point wardrobes, statement headboards and homes with pergolas.
The post Eight welcoming wood-panelled dining rooms appeared first on Dezeen.
https://urbhy.com/eight-welcoming-wood-panelled-dining-rooms/?feed_id=16852&_unique_id=64e935d9a961e
إرسال تعليق