Grzybowska Sets a Quiet Tone With Beige, Brass, and Mango Wood Notes
Grzybowska places an eighth-floor apartment in Warsaw, Poland within the fast-rising Wola district, where terrace views catch the city’s skyline. Designed by Dawid Konieczny Interiors, the corner home shifts from two small bedrooms to one generous suite and a larger living area. The reworked plan lets a calm palette of beige plaster and microcement carry throughout, while curved forms, organic furnishings, and tailored lighting set a modern rhythm across rooms.










Even before the door closes, the terrace pulls the eye. Daylight slides across beige plaster and microcement floors, softening corners and rounding edges in a quiet cadence.
This is an apartment in Warsaw’s Wola district by Dawid Konieczny Interiors, redesigned in 2023 around one larger bedroom, an expanded living room, and a kitchen. The throughline is tactile and tonal, set by a single shade that travels from walls to floors and calibrated with a handful of assertive forms.
Curate The Palette
Beige plaster wraps the rooms with a consistent grain. Microcement in the same tone runs underfoot, erasing visual breaks and lending a steady base for movement and furniture.
Velvet curtains in quiet neutrals filter glare and add depth, reading as a soft divider when closed. The continuity of color expands the apartment visually while letting texture do the expressive work across surfaces.
Curve And Threshold
A curved wall draws a gentle line between living and sleeping. An oval cut-out forms the bedroom entry, turning a simple passage into a moment of pause and orientation.
The move replaces tight corridors with a single gesture that organizes daily flow and frames light. It reads as an interior landmark, quiet yet decisive, and holds the palette without interruption.
Living Room Assembly
In the living area, an organic sofa with a flowing backrest sits low and generous. Its textured upholstery tempers the hard finish of the floor and sets an easy posture for the room.
A mango wood table anchors the seating zone while a black wooden armchair with a leather braid adds density and contrast. A large ceramic vase on a wooden pedestal introduces scale and a hand-made profile that plays well with the curved wall nearby.
Light And Hardware
A linear track lighting system runs the length of the main rooms. The fixtures wash the plaster and define paths after dark, keeping ceilings clear and measured.
Simple brushed-steel hooks stand out against the plaster where needed, giving a cool touch point amid warm tones. Their precise geometry counters the relaxed forms of seating and casework without shouting.
Bath And Kitchen Tones
At the bathroom threshold, a noble green breaks the beige and signals a shift. Inside, microcement wraps every surface, and a large mirror extends sightlines.
Fittings in a clean, contemporary profile keep the room calm and exact. In the kitchen, plaster continues across furniture faces and a softly contoured bar, tying preparation and dining into the home’s single material story.
Back at the terrace, the city sits just beyond the rail. Evening light warms the plaster, and the floor’s matte finish dials down reflections to a gentle glow.
What remains is a measured interior with a clear palette and assured edits. The apartment trades clutter for texture and lets light, curve, and craft set the mood.
Photography by Oni studio
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