Manufacturers: Na rosembaum e O designer artesão, Adriana Yazbek, Arte Fatos, Botteh, Carvalho Movelaria, +23Casa Fortaleza, Casa Trópico, Codexhome e Coisas de doris, Cremme, Dalle Piage, Deca, Dpot Objetos, Granitorre, Gustavo Bittencourt, In Casa, Less Design, Madeira art, Melvino, Oiamo, Olho moveis, Pedra Paulista, Prototype, Quel Casadei, Seiva, Srta. Galante, Wentz, Wooding, deezign-23
Interior design has been characterized by infinite alternatives in coatings, finishes, and furniture to achieve unique and unrepeatable spaces. Designers are constantly coming up with innovative solutions and materials specifically created for a distinctive spatial perception. However, there is also a trend that seeks the warmth of the interior spaces by exposing the raw building materials as they are. The richness of materials such as wood and concrete gives that feeling of durability and low maintenance that, combined with an attention-to-detail design, makes spaces look warm yet stay true in essence. See below for 35 examples of interior spaces where concrete and wood appear in their almost purest state.
In contemporary interior architecture, service provisions—mechanical, electrical, HVAC, plumbing—are almost always treated as elements to be concealed. Thickened wall cavities, extensive dropped ceilings, and, in regions where solid construction such as brick or concrete prevails, furred-out walls are routinely employed to hide these systems. This approach has become so normalized that it often forms the starting assumption for spatial planning, inherently constraining imagination and reducing the range of spatial possibilities. The priority shifts towards covering-up, rather than exploring how these systems might coexist visibly within a design language.