Bold and industrial, prominent metals in interior design are  more often seen in large commercial spaces – but how do they translate  to the home? Fans of the luster and shine of steel, aluminum and copper  can bring the modern minimalism of these metals into living rooms,  kitchens and entire indoor spaces with these 12 metallic interior design  ideas, from striking details like fireplaces and water fountains to  larger applications like walls and ceilings.
Ribbed Metal Ceiling
    
        Cost-effective and totally unexpected, the ribbed metal  ceiling in this Coconut Grove, Florida home by Mateu Architecture echoes  metallic elements used in the kitchen and outside the house.
Stainless Steel Mosaic Wall Tiles
    
        (images via: memois)
Stainless steel tiles aren’t unusual in bathrooms or as back  splashes in modern kitchens, but it’s their use here to cover an entire  living room wall that puts them in a whole new light. Shimmering and  textural, this tile application creates an eye-catching accent wall.
Japanese Aluminum Modular Kitchen
    
        Shiny metal is much more than just an accent in this modular  kitchen. Calling to mind commercial kitchens in which every surface must  be easily sanitized, but on a smaller scale, the minimalist result is  clutter-free and contrasts nicely with a natural wood floor.
Penny Tile Floors
    
        At about $2.50 per square foot, paving your floor with money  is not as extravagant as it sounds. Though they’re now made mostly of  zinc, pennies still give off a beautiful copper sheen, and their natural  patina lends a variegated result that is rich and subtly shiny.
Ultramodern Steel Sofa
    
        Looking like it was carved from one solid block of metal, this  curving sofa in a shape reminiscent of a sea shell is definitely a bold  way to bring metals into your living room.
B3 Monoblock Kitchen
    
        Seemingly seamless, the B3 Monoblock by Bulthaup so strongly  resembles a solid block of metal that it causes people to wonder whether  you hauled it up to your apartment with a crane. Custom-made of  high-grade stainless steel, these lustrous kitchen islands are totally  lust-worthy.
Steel Stairs
    
        Since stairs are often located in the heart of a home, they  provide another opportunity to stun with steel. These three creative  sets of metal stairs in unusual designs certainly stand out.
Aluminum Walls
    
        (image via: dezeen)
For this prefabricated home in Kanazawa, Japan, architecture  firm Atelier Tekuto formed the interior spaces using molded aluminum  rings, left unfinished so that the wall and ceiling surfaces of the home  are entirely metallic. The architects cut energy costs by 80% by  putting the reflective qualities of aluminum to good use, installing  small LED lights directly into the ceilings and walls.
Contemporary Steel Fireplace
    
        (image via: tktdw)
A column of steel stretching from floor to ceiling makes the  living room fireplace an even bigger draw. These three examples include  minimalist matte cold-rolled steel, a more artistic reflective stainless  steel surround and a  free-standing modern fireplace that even includes  storage space.
Copper Water Wall
    
        Water fountains are perhaps one of the easiest ways to bring  metallics into your home in a big, bold way – in many cases, you simply  hang the fountain on wall brackets and plug it in. Other installations  can be more complex, like built-in water walls. The reflective qualities  of the metal give the falling water even more sparkle.
Industrial Metal Apartment
    
        (images via: dornob)
Taking the whole ‘metallic interior’ theme to an intense  extreme, this apartment design in Moscow by designer Peter Kostelov is  startlingly industrial – some might even say prison-like. But even if  you consider this much  metal to be overkill, you can’t say that the  space isn’t visually engaging with its patchwork of textures, visible  welds and exposed rivets.
Void Masonry: Entire Home Made of Steel
    
        (images via: dornob)
Atelier Tekuto’s beautiful all-metal house may be even more  extreme than the metal apartment interior, but at least it’s  light-filled with a grid of glass openings in the steel sheath. The  steel boxes in the metal walls aren’t just visually striking and  convenient for storage; they’re load-bearing, and also designed to  regulate indoor temperatures as the seasons change.
 
 
0 comments:
Post a Comment