Atelierzero reworked a classic Milan apartment by removing most of its non-load-bearing walls and introducing furniture-like inserts throughout the plan. The project connects the main unit with an adjoining studio while allowing both areas to remain semi-independent. Instead of conventional doors, the studio used openings, hatches, and built-in volumes to organize circulation between rooms. The layout is structured around a warm orange corridor that acts as the apartment’s main axis and references Milan’s colonnaded porticos.
Color-blocked volumes define the interior as a series of distinct but connected zones. Cabinet-embedded hatches lead to the powder room, utility space, en suite bedroom, and studio, while rectilinear cutaways open into the main entertainment area. A taupe kitchen module sits within the great room and shields the study and dining area behind it.
Flexible Milan Apartments
Atelierzero Reworks a Milan Apartment Through Color-Blocked Inserts
Trend Themes
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Modular Furniture-insert Living — Integration of furniture-like inserts creates compact, reconfigurable layouts that challenge traditional fixed floorplans.
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Color-blocked Spatial Zoning — Bold color corridors and volumes are being used to visually and functionally delineate connected zones within open-plan interiors.
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Open-plan Semi-independence — Spatial strategies that maintain permeability while enabling semi-autonomous subunits support hybrid living arrangements between primary units and adjunct studios.
Industry Implications
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Residential Architecture — Architectural practices adopting removable partitions and embedded volumes are positioned to redefine apartment layouts for density and flexibility.
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Modular Furniture Manufacturing — Producers of built-in, multi-functional modules can capture demand for integrated elements that perform circulation, storage, and spatial separation.
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Proptech and Real Estate Development — Real estate models emphasizing adaptable unit configurations and micro-unit adjacencies open opportunities for novel leasing, valuation, and space-utilization schemes.