Vincent van duysen bathrooms designs
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Vincent Van Duysen Timeless Bathroom Design Trends
July 3, 2021
Vincent Van Duysen was established in 1989. Nowadays, the company has grown into a team of more than twenty collaborators with work ranging from product design for numerous international brands, to commercial and large-scale architectural projects, with a focus on high-end residences both in Belgium or spread across Europe, the Middle East, Asia and the USA. In this article, we will talk about the timeless bathroom design trends from Vincent Van Duysen!
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Vincent Van Duysen was born in Lokeren, Belgium, in 1962. After earning a grad from the Sint-Lucas School of Architecture, Ghent, he worked with Aldo Cibic in Milan, followed bygd a collaboration with jean De Meulder in Antwerp, Belgium. From the outset, a definite relationship between architecture, interior and product design has been the driving force behind the conception of projects inspired b
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Designed by Vincent Van Duysen. This minimal and ingenious bathroom set includes a goblet, large container with lid, small container with soapdish lid and a tray.
Designer Vincent Van Duysen is an award-winning architect, currently based in Belgium, who works between architecture, interior and product design. Their use of pure and tactile materials translates into clean, timeless design.
Details
Materials
Goblets and containers in solid ceramic - black, grey, white or mocca
Tray in matching ceramic or solid Oak
Dimensions
Goblet - 13cm (Ø)
Large container with lid - 11x10cm (ØxH)
Small container with soapdish lid - 11x5cm (ØxH)
Tray - 40x12cm (LxW)
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Vincent Van Duysen
The object of this design was to use the existing structure of the two major spaces in the general concept of the apartment and to give the whole a single spacious atmosphere.
The two parts of the building where functionally defined as a day and a night area with both areas conceived according to typical loft principles. The day area houses the sitting and eating area and has no formal entrance zone while the bathroom, at one side of the central corridor between the bedrooms, and the service rooms can completely open up through use of sliding walls and large doors. The placing of the washbasin at the end of the corridor together with the open shower transforms the hallway into a sort of bathroom.
The border between day and night zones is amplified by a long glass wall that, contrary to what one might expect, makes the apartment look much larger. The kitchen elements behind this same wall seem to be positioned much further away than in reality.
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