S House by Jame Design

S House in China by Jame Design, completed in 2024, reads as a house shaped around light, views, and daily routines. Broad openings frame the city beyond, while warm wood and pale finishes keep the rooms calm and legible. The result is a home that moves easily from gathering to retreat without losing visual connection.

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About S House

Daylight enters in long bands and settles across pale floors, wood joinery, and soft upholstery. From room to room, the house keeps the skyline in view while staying grounded in domestic use.

S House is a house in China by Jame Design, completed in 2024. The plan centers on everyday routines, with open gathering areas, a kitchen that stays within reach of the living room, and quieter rooms set back from the main circulation.

Open Living Room

The main living room opens to large windows that pull in a broad view of the city. A low sofa, a wooden lounge chair, and a round paper pendant keep the room relaxed, while the pale rug and light flooring soften the larger volume.

Built-in shelving and timber trim give the room clear edges without making it feel closed in. The arrangement leaves the center open for conversation, reading, or a quiet pause beside the view.

Kitchen At The Center

The kitchen sits at the heart of the house, linking meal prep with shared time around the island. White cabinetry, integrated appliances, and a broad counter keep the room orderly, while the wood underlayer adds warmth where hands and utensils meet the surface.

Dining chairs line the island so the room can shift from breakfast to homework to evening conversation. The layout keeps movement simple and lets the household gather without leaving the practical core of the plan.

A Stair In Light

The stair becomes a quiet visual marker, with a solid guard and a sharply cut opening above bringing in daylight. Its pale surfaces catch the light differently through the day, giving the circulation zone a calm but active presence.

Rather than hiding the route between levels, the design makes it part of the interior sequence. That choice keeps the house readable and links upper and lower areas through one clear line of movement.

Rooms With Soft Edges

The bedroom turns more enclosed, with a deep wood-framed window seat set against a dimmer, more restful palette. Here, the city is still visible, but the framing is tighter and the mood more private.

Across the house, storage, paneling, and built-in surfaces hold the composition together. The material mix stays restrained, letting light, proportion, and the shift from open room to quiet room carry the project.

Photography courtesy of Jame Design
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- by Matt Watts

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