[Japandi Style] Simple aesthetics has evolved again! When Wabi Sabi x Nordic style x water mold, create a modern, simple, quiet and beautiful house!

When a house perfectly integrates the two cultural aesthetics of Japanese aesthetics, wabi-sabi, and Nordic aesthetics of simplicity, it forms a Zen-like minimalist style as the main interior design. This is the most popular "Japandi" style today! In line with the concept of the original style of the clean water mold without any modification on the surface after removing the formwork, when its elements are completely integrated, it is sublimated into a modern, simple, quiet and beautiful house. Let’s take a look at 7 residential designs inspired by this!

Swedish Archipelago House simple wooden summer house

 

Norm Architects designed a timber summer house rooted in Nordic building methods and Japanese design concepts, consisting of four wooden volumes with interlocking pitched roofs and connected by trapezoidal wooden decks that connect to the sloping site. The hierarchical space collapses into a functional layout. Let the surrounding landscape tones of stone gray transform into concrete floors that penetrate into the kitchen, living room and dining room, poetically interpreting the comfort of being integrated into nature, creating a peaceful atmosphere for the home.

▲ Archipelago House Design/Photo: Norm Architects

▲ Archipelago House Design/Photo: Norm Architects

▲ Archipelago House Design/Photo: Norm Architects

▲Dulwich Hill Vaults Design: Benn + Penna Photo: Tom Ferguson- Katherine Lu

A refuge from the hustle and bustle of Germany's Glogauer Strasse

 

A peaceful and minimalist one-bedroom home and office inspired by monastery design, providing a peaceful sanctuary from the hustle and bustle of Berlin. Using muted oatmeal tones and richly textured gray tones, polished concrete floors and smooth stucco-style plaster walls underpin the space, using raw, earthy and natural materials - warm oak timbers, copper, distressed browns Brown leather and wicker, these materials create a soothing atmosphere of quiet elegance.

▲Glogauer Strasse Design: Mar Plus Ask Photo: Piet-Albert Goethals

▲Glogauer Strasse Design: Mar Plus Ask Photo: Piet-Albert Goethals

▲Glogauer Strasse Design: Mar Plus Ask Photo: Piet-Albert Goethals

▲Glogauer Strasse Design: Mar Plus Ask Photo: Piet-Albert Goethals

Functional minimalist home in Lysterfield Home, Australia

 

Designer Christine Rose used creamy white as the main color of the home decoration, choosing soft tones of Danish white oak, natural quartz stone and Italian raw linen, reflecting from the chalky toned surfaces while adding warmth with carefully selected artwork. Naturally, the glazing floods the house with natural light, infusing the home with a sense of flow and creating a calm and relaxing mood, designing a functional family home.

▲ Lysterfield Home Design: Christine Rose Photo: Martina Gemmola

▲ Lysterfield Home Design: Christine Rose Photo: Martina Gemmola

▲ Lysterfield Home Design: Christine Rose Photo: Martina Gemmola

▲ Lysterfield Home Design: Christine Rose Photo: Martina Gemmola

TaiwanAvenue of StarsSimple clear water model house

 

The functional adjustment of the glass partition pattern gives the space a sense of lightness and multi-purpose, and avoids the cramped and oppressive feeling of traditional partitions. When the door is open, it can introduce natural light and create a broad view; when it is closed, it has a semi-transparent effect and can be used as a study area. The Japanese room near the window lets light and shadow play, with gray-scale water molding and translucent glass partitions, decorated with colorful fabrics, making it quiet and warm. White functional open cabinets are embedded to create a simple and pure space tone, shaping a modern style. .

▲ Avenue of Stars  Design:B-STUDIO

▲ Avenue of Stars  Design:B-STUDIO

▲ Avenue of Stars  Design:B-STUDIO

Belgium Project VV modern minimalist house

 

Belgian designer Pieter Vanrenterghem is known for his cleverly layered, minimalist designs that focus on the tactility of materials, choosing travertine with its rough-finished surfaces, concrete for the floors and brushed wood in the kitchen, alternating light textures throughout the home. Colored and dark oak, maintaining earthy tones. The use of natural materials creates a warm and comfortable home atmosphere.

▲Project VV Design: Pieter Vanrenterghem Photo: Thomas De Bruyne

▲Project VV Design: Pieter Vanrenterghem Photo: Thomas De Bruyne

▲Project VV Design: Pieter Vanrenterghem Photo: Thomas De Bruyne

▲Project VV Design: Pieter Vanrenterghem Photo: Thomas De Bruyne

▲Minimalist Modern House Design: FGR Architects Photo: Peter Bennetts

▲Minimalist Modern House Design: FGR Architects Photo: Peter Bennetts

▲Minimalist Modern House Design: FGR Architects Photo: Peter Bennetts

Ukrainian AZ flat is a simple house centered on "boxes"

 

Visual designer Artem Tiutiunnyk created a "box" that can be rested in the center of the space to divide the internal space and serve as the visual focus of the entire apartment. The module is designed like a piece of furniture and integrates most of the house's storage space into the wall. . The other surfaces of the apartment, walls, ceilings and floors are pale and smooth, with a row of wooden storage cabinets and a concrete fireplace in the space below the wall cabinets, adding a lot of color to the cool white space. Appropriately evoking the warm atmosphere of the space.

▲AZ flat Design: Artem Tiutiunnyk Photo: home-designing.com

▲AZ flat Design: Artem Tiutiunnyk Photo: home-designing.com

▲AZ flat Design: Artem Tiutiunnyk Photo: home-designing.com

▲AZ flat Design: Artem Tiutiunnyk Photo: home-designing.com

Australia's WALNUT HOUSE is an intoxicating house of silence

 

Walnut House embraces the surrounding lush natural landscape, creating a deep impression of warmth through a combination of natural materials and tones. The massive vaulted ceiling lifts the eye upwards, while integrated linear lighting at its peak softly illuminates the concrete space, framing views at either end. Large floor-to-ceiling glass windows immerse the occupants in the unique countryside. Environment.

▲WALNUT HOUSE Design/Photo: Adam Kane

▲WALNUT HOUSE Design/Photo: Adam Kane

▲WALNUT HOUSE Design/Photo: Adam Kane

▲WALNUT HOUSE Design/Photo: Adam Kane

Spacious open plan house in SALUD Madrid, Spain

 

The dining and kitchen area is placed in the center of the space layout, visually connecting the facades at both ends of the space. The view is broad and almost endless, and it also allows light and airflow to circulate freely. Transitional main beams on the ceiling mixed with lime finishes, textiles, joinery and travertine cabinets on the walls all contribute to the quality, craftsmanship and warmth of this house, while the soft solid color ambience provides a visual calm, airy, Light and shadow redefine the space, creating a calm and visually comfortable spatial experience.

▲SALUD Madrid Design: OOAA Arquitectura Photo: Rafael Diéguez

▲SALUD Madrid Design: OOAA Arquitectura Photo: Rafael Diéguez

▲SALUD Madrid Design: OOAA Arquitectura Photo: Rafael Diéguez

▲SALUD Madrid Design: OOAA Arquitectura Photo: Rafael Diéguez

Japandi's blank aesthetics proposes another level of thinking, allowing the space to breathe naturally, advocating a free and original spiritual experience, allowing us to feel the purity and calmness of life, and a more settled lifestyle conveying spiritual relaxation. , with a calming warmth, it will bring you back to the simple and minimalist beauty of simple life.

 

Japandi is a classic architectural form that has attracted the attention and challenge of many designers who love Japanese simplicity. If you have any architectural or interior design needs, please feel free to contact us:B-Studio online consultation

interior space-Avenue of Stars➦ 

construction space-Qing Shui Fu ➦