Belgium / Tag

Sint-Anna by Decancq-Vercruysse Architects

Sint-Anna by Decancq-Vercruysse Architects

Sint-Anna transforms a once-blocky 1970s house in Kortrijk, Belgium, into an elevated retreat by Decancq-Vercruysse Architects. The project inverts the traditional layout, lifting everyday living to the first floor and surrounding it with terraces and trees. What began as an under-budget duplex becomes a calm suburban home, tuned to garden light, shifting seasons, and a quieter pace of life.

Scho’s House on Theux Hills: Quiet Contemporary Valley Living at Edge

Scho’s House on Theux Hills: Quiet Contemporary Valley Living at Edge

Scho’s House sits on the edge of Theux, Belgium, where a residential street meets open farmland and the valley beyond. Crahayjamaigne shapes a compact three-level house that treads lightly on the steep terrain, pressing stone volumes into the hillside and setting timber-clad living areas above them. The result is a measured rural dwelling that balances long valley views with a quiet presence at the boundary of town and field.

Charlotte by Victoria-Maria Interior Design

Charlotte by Victoria-Maria Interior Design

Charlotte sets a richly atmospheric tone inside a historic maison de maître near a central Brussels lake, transformed by Victoria-Maria Interior Design into a generous family apartment. Across approximately 600 square meters, the project leans into a warm, global-inflected interior style, where rust and golden hues fold into layered textiles, collected objects, and crafted details. Every room feels composed for daily life yet tuned to the character of the building.

PAVILION SESTIG: Concrete Modernism Refined For Work and Home Life

PAVILION SESTIG: Concrete Modernism Refined For Work and Home Life

PAVILION SESTIG stands in Belgium as a Modernist pavilion reassessed by architect Glenn Sestig for both work and living. The project turns an existing concrete structure in Deurle into the headquarters for Glenn Sestig Architects and the shared home of Sestig and his partner Bernard. Calm proportions, a restrained material palette, and an inward-looking courtyard bring domestic life and studio practice into a precise, shared setting.

Vorst: Triangular Top-Floor Apartment

Vorst: Triangular Top-Floor Apartment

Vorst crowns a modernist 1955 building in Brussels, Belgium, where architect Arnout De Sutter reimagines a once-awkward top-floor apartment for a stylist and art lover. What began as a triangular pied-à-terre now unfolds as an urban retreat, shaped around light, views, and a generous rhythm of hosting friends. The result is a calm, layered interior that folds hospitality, privacy, and art display into one clear, flowing plan.

Home for Life by Karel Verstraeten

Home for Life by Karel Verstraeten

Home for Life sits in Ghent, Belgium, as a compact house for a retired couple by architect Karel Verstraeten. The single-storey home arranges daily life across an accessible plan, then tucks a small loft under the gabled roof for visiting grandchildren. Warm timber surfaces, generous circular windows, and chimney-like roof volumes keep the mood domestic and bright while the layout quietly anticipates future care.

Towhouse VI by Decancq-Vercruysse Architects

Towhouse VI by Decancq-Vercruysse Architects

Towhouse VI anchors a careful renovation of a 1950s house in Kortrijk, Belgium by Decancq-Vercruysse Architects. The project treats everyday rituals as design drivers, translating personal habits into warm materials, generous storage, and measured connections to a walled garden. Living areas open to light and greenery, while quieter rooms lean into darker tones and soft texture. It reads as domestic craft tuned to daily life.

Dimitri: Radiant Rooms and Artful Layers for Lively Family Living

Dimitri: Radiant Rooms and Artful Layers for Lively Family Living

Dimitri reimagines a Brussels, Belgium townhouse as a spirited family house by Victoria-Maria Interior Design. Across rooms shaped for a couple and five children, the project channels color, art, and texture into daily life. The renovation unfolds over nearly five years and carries a personal thread, weaving pieces from the studio’s Heimat collection with works by Marcel Arnaud and Simon Buret for a layered, lived-in rhythm.

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