the exterior concrete of the vineyard home
Photography by Samuel Holzner.

Residential Designs Around the World With Stunning Silhouettes

Today’s best residential designs worldwide embrace fabulous forms, glamorous geometries, and stunning silhouettes.

Lens°ass Architects

site: Pelt, Belgium
Located in a village, the only thing traditional about this new 4,100-square-foot, two-level house for a retired couple is the extensive use of brick, a favorite local material. It forms the body of the structure, two cylindrical volumes topped with a single cast-concrete roof slab, folded up at its ends like a jaunty hat. Walls of glazing keep the upper-level kitchen, dining, and living areas bright and airy, while a wide, slotlike shaft brings light to the bedroom and bathroom in the basement, which is accessed via a sculptural concrete staircase.

a brick house in Pelt, Belgium. Photography by Jan Verlinde/Living Inside.
Photography by Jan Verlinde/Living Inside.
an orb like fireplace in a sitting room
Photography by Jan Verlinde/Living Inside.
a concrete kitchen with wood panel ceilings
Photography by Jan Verlinde/Living Inside.
a side of the brick house
Photography by Jan Verlinde/Living Inside.
a cylindrical shape next to the stairs
Photography by Jan Verlinde/Living Inside.
an indoor pool
Photography by Jan Verlinde/Living Inside.

Horma Estudio

site: Puerto de Sagunto, Spain
Classic Iberian colors and materials—white lime render and terra-cotta colored tile—make the contrasting exterior forms and geometries of this 4,300-square-foot house even more graphic. Inside, the archetypal hues reappear in pointillistic terrazzo flooring that’s joined by maple and cherry built-in furniture and cabinetry, blanched walls and ceilings, and oodles of natural light thanks to wide swaths of glazing—all of which help to orchestrate the complex play of curves and angles, solids and voids.

a geometric shaped exterior of a Spanish house
Photography by Mariela Apollonio.
a kitchen island in front of a large window
Photography by Mariela Apollonio.
a red spiral staircase
Photography by Mariela Apollonio.
the geometric exterior of a Spanish house
Photography by Mariela Apollonio.

Atelier Štěpán

site: Nový Jicˇín, Czech Republic
An enormous oval aperture punched in the flat roof of this 3,600-square-foot, two-story villa allows for a gardenlike atrium—an expanse of grass lawn flanked by a sauna, plunge pool, and timber decking—that really brings the outdoors inside. The large opening is repeated on a smaller scale with James Turrell–like circular skylights above the living area, stairwell, and elsewhere, all bringing nature even deeper into the heart of the home.

a dining room lit up by a large horizontal window
Photography by BoysPlayNice.
a bird's eye view of the home's circular skylight
Photography by BoysPlayNice.
the exterior of the house accented by greenery
Photography by BoysPlayNice.
a sitting room with a large grey couch
Photography by BoysPlayNice.
a tree is planted in the center of the circular skylight
Photography by BoysPlayNice.

Peter Pichler Architecture

site: Termeno, Italy
Located on a vineyard hilltop in the South Tyrol, this new 4,100-square-foot villa exults in dramatic lines and intriguing geometries inspired by the surrounding Alpine landscape. Comprising folded planes of cast concrete, the low, ribbonlike form embraces a central courtyard protected from strong winds off nearby Lake Garda. Surfaces clad in local wood warm the simple, minimalist interiors where strategically positioned glass walls frame magnificent views while maintaining privacy.

a window seat looking over a terrace
Photography by Gustav Willeit.
a Bir'd eye view of a house in a vineyard
Photography by Gustav Willeit.
a bathroom with floating double vanity and marble throughout
Photography by Gustav Willeit.
the exterior concrete of the vineyard home
Photography by Samuel Holzner.

read more

recent stories