Stained Glass Doors and Terrazzo in a London Home
In the popular Dartmouth Park in London stands this recently renovated terraced house with unique interiors. The 1930s four-bedroom house has creative interiors featuring beautiful bespoke steel stained glass doors and terrazzo, as well as colorful elements and custom wooden cabinets.
These new additions work beautifully with the 1930s architecture of the house. At the back of the house, you can also find a charming garden with evergreen plants and a separate garden shed which is now used as an office space.
The kitchen space is located at the back of the house with easy access to the green garden, creating a seamless indoor/outdoor living concept. But what makes this kitchen so unique are the Italian terrazzo tiles on the floor and the wall.
Everywhere in this home, you’ll find color accents, and the kitchen cabinets are painted in a racing green shade. The green continues in the marble worktop and lamp.
A pair of beautiful sliding steel stained glass doors separate the kitchen from the living room at the front of the house.
The door to the hallway on the right features even more colorful glass panes.
The living room is a calm space with chalky lime plaster walls, an herringbone parquet floor, and beige tiles around the wood burner.
The stairs with a technicolor carpet runner lead you to the first floor.
The master bedroom features a custom clustered, sawn oak wardrobe and cupboard space. The ceiling and part of the wall are painted in a midnight blue shade
Colorful glass panes have been added in the bespoke oak framed doors to echo the ground floor doors.
The second double bedroom has been turned into a second sitting room/home library and also features the beautiful bay window that you could also spot in the living room.
The family bathroom is clad in Calacatta marble.
The loft space has been converted into another bedroom using skylights to make it a bright space and it also has its own en suite bathroom.
The garden houses a Scottish cedar-clad studio that is lined with Douglas Fir. It has panels of copper-light windows that were salvaged from a former London School of Economics building.
The house is listed for £1,900,000 at The Modern House