French Classical Apartment in White 304 Stainless Steel
A whole-home French classical delivery: white paneled 304 stainless steel cabinetry with brass knobs, arched illuminated display niches, bookmatched marble walls and herringbone oak floors, running from dining and living rooms through wardrobes to the bathrooms.

The home
Every door front in this apartment speaks the language of French classicism: framed panels picked out with a fine bead, small brass knobs, and a soft warm-white lacquer. The formal centrepiece is the dining wall, where a row of arched niches sits above a bookmatched marble slab and a bank of paneled drawers, flanked by two full-height display columns whose glass doors glow from internal shelf lighting. A marble-topped dining table stands directly in front, so the entire wall works at once as storage, servery and backdrop.
The living room pairs that classical joinery with harder, more mineral surfaces. A dramatic bookmatched marble wall anchors the media zone, while the adjoining run of paneled doors conceals deep storage and breaks into a bronze-glass display column at the corner. In the bedrooms, wardrobe walls run floor to ceiling — some in plain warm white above herringbone oak, others mixing paneled fronts with smoked-glass doors. Open one and the interior is fully fitted: a mirrored dressing door, LED-lit hanging rails, and flat accessory drawers in a leather-toned finish with a pull-out trouser rack below.
The bathrooms carry the scheme into its most demanding rooms. One bath is wrapped almost entirely in grey-veined stone, with a built-in tub, a black-framed glass shower and a white vanity under a granite top; another pairs a stone-topped vanity with a tall bronze-glass linen cabinet placed just outside the door, and a third looks through to the fitted dressing area beyond. Because every carcass and door is fabricated from 304 stainless steel beneath the lacquered classical facades, the same cabinetry standard runs unchanged from the dining room to the wettest corner of the home — no swelling panels, and no separate bathroom grade.
Photographed after handover








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