Appartamento San Sebastiano reimagines a late-19th-century apartment in Milan, Italy, through the lens of Deamicisarchitetti. The studio reshapes the corner residence into a fluid, Wunderkammer-inspired interior where vintage pieces, art, and custom elements converse across time. Rooms slip into one another along a circular route, while materials from Carrara marble to steel and wood ground the evolving collection of objects in a quietly theatrical domestic setting.
Casa GK+G reworks a 1970s apartment in Milan, Italy with a confident, graphic hand. Studio Moodular leads the transformation, pulling color and geometry into everyday rooms while keeping the bones calm and livable. The project leans into a bright, contemporary attitude that suits city life without losing warmth.
Casa in Isola sits on the third floor of a 1960s building in Milan, Italy, and reads as a measured rethink of urban living. Nube Architetture transforms a one-bedroom apartment into a more capable home in 2024, adding a second bedroom and bathroom without dimming the rooms that matter. The result preserves the building’s easy proportions while recutting the plan for daily life and light.
iaa_E15 sits in Milan, Italy, within a 1930s rationalist building near Corso Buenos Aires. Icona Architetti Associati reshaped this apartment, originally a pied-à-terre, into a full-time home with a clear plan and a controlled material palette. Curves and arches replace doors with deliberate thresholds, while wood and marble ground the rooms in a calm rhythm. The result reads measured and urbane, designed in 2023 for daily use rather than occasional stays.
Bronzino Apartment sits in Milan, Italy, overlooking a tree-lined square near Porta Venezia, and was designed by Gabriela Casagrande Arquitetura. The reworked apartment turns 100m² (1,076 sq ft) into two suites and a calm, integrated living core for a binational couple. Natural materials and precise joinery steer the mood while contemporary pieces, including a sculptural armchair by Casagrande, give the rooms a clear identity without breaking the measured pace of the plan.
Milan Apartment in Porta Venezia sits inside a classical palazzo in Milan, Italy, reimagined by Eligo Studio for a creative couple. The renovation holds onto early-20th-century craft while threading a clear palette of soft hues and anthracite across rooms. It’s an apartment reshaped for convivial, contemporary living without losing its Milanese poise.
Dimora Magenta is a large, elegant apartment located on the first floor of a historic building in Milan city center, Italy, designed by Bevilacqua Architects in 2023. The residence, which overlooks Corso Magenta, features a classic aesthetic that incorporates iconic design pieces and precious handcrafted materials, showcasing the best of Italian craftsmanship while also integrating modern home automation and audiovisual systems for a hyper-contemporary experience.
The recently remodeled 2024 apartment in Milan by design group Archventil features natural and industrial materials with an intelligent approach to interior design.