Casa Granata by Labia Design
Casa Granata sets a refined domestic scene in Frattamaggiore, Italy, where Labia Design reshapes an apartment into a calm yet animated sequence of rooms. Soft neutrals, pale wood, and tailored furnishings frame family life while broad glazing draws in daylight from the terrace. Each room holds a distinct mood, from the sociable living core to the characterful children’s quarters, giving the project a warm, contemporary Italian rhythm.








Daylight drifts across pale flooring and low furniture as the apartment opens toward a deep terrace. Soft curtains move slightly, filtering the view and giving every surface a quiet glow.
Within this calm envelope, Casa Granata by Labia Design reshapes an apartment in Frattamaggiore, Italy into a contemporary home centered on color, texture, and family life. The project arranges generous living areas alongside playful children’s rooms and serene suites, using a consistent palette to keep the layout legible. Interior character grows from material contrasts and furnishings rather than from complex forms.
Living Core And Warm Wood
The main living room turns a television wall into a quiet focal plane, with vertical wood cladding flanking a smooth pale surface and a long graphite console. A dark sofa, low tables, and a sculptural red lounge chair gather in front, creating a relaxed conversation area that still feels visually ordered. Plants, books, and small objects rest along the console, softening the geometry and adding traces of daily use.
Dining Sequence To Kitchen
From the living area, the eye moves straight to the dining table and kitchen, held together by a shared tone of warm wood and white. A slender marble‑topped table sits on a ribbed timber base, surrounded by white chairs whose curved shells lighten the composition. Above, a sculptural ceiling fixture of circular metallic discs spreads like ripples, tying the table to the kitchen peninsula just beyond.
The kitchen wall balances tall white cabinetry with a slate‑colored backsplash and a wood band that continues the cladding used elsewhere. Built‑in appliances, a stone‑clad island, and a slim breakfast counter keep the volume clean while still practical for family cooking. Sliding glass along one side pulls light deep inside, so the dining area works as both daily hub and extended entertaining room.
Playful Children’s Realm
A dedicated playroom opens directly to the terrace, where a foosball table and bicycle mark an outdoor extension of kids’ activities. Inside, a bright mural of geometric mountains, rockets, and planets wraps the wall, setting a storybook backdrop for compact tables, chairs, and storage units. Light curtains temper the sun while still keeping the connection to the exterior balcony.
Beyond a sliding door, the children’s bedroom carries the theme into a more focused environment for rest and homework. Blue and yellow cabinetry lines the wall, with circular knobs echoing the polka‑dot pattern painted above the built‑in desk. The bedspread repeats the space motif, so study, sleep, and play share a coherent visual world that feels engaging rather than chaotic.
Quiet Suites And Bath
In the main bedroom, a ribbed wall painted in a light tone stands behind a tailored bed dressed in gray textiles. Warm wood flooring and dark bedside furniture ground the room, while framed art leaning casually against the wall hints at a more personal layer soon to be hung. The palette stays restrained so daylight reading or evening rest happens in a calm atmosphere.
The bathroom shifts toward soft color, with pale pink walls surrounding a freestanding white tub set against charcoal and marble panels. A wood vanity with vessel basin and wall‑mounted taps adds tactility, while slim black tracks guide ceiling lights over the tub and shower. Large tiles and a glass partition keep views clear, making the room feel open yet sheltered.
As the day moves from shared meals to quiet routines, Casa Granata holds a steady balance of warmth and clarity. Light, wood, and color guide people from social areas to intimate corners without abrupt transitions. The apartment reads as one continuous interior, tuned carefully to the different rhythms of family life.
Photography by Carlo Oriente
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