Homes & Gardens

SOME KIND OF WONDERFUL

While Paolo Moschino and Philip Vergeylen’s garden looks, at first sight, like a simple design, it is, in fact, quite complex, created to work on three levels. The first from the inside ‘like a framed picture,’ with views from every window; the second as an outdoor extension comprising a collection of independent ‘rooms’; and the third, as exterior decor, blurring the indoor/outdoor boundary.

Interior design director Philip won & 2021 Best Large

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Homes & Gardens

Homes & Gardens2 min read
A Great Escape
WE shouldn’t need to convince you that a weekend break in Milan is a good idea. Of course it’s the centre of contemporary design, but also it’s the place for delicious food, great shopping and beautiful architecture. However, we might need to persuad
Homes & Gardens8 min readArchitecture
In The Mould
When kept architecturally intact, 19th-century French houses often come with an abundance of decorative details. One option would be to embrace neutral hues and let the artistry within these details do the talking but, here, Paris-based designer Laur
Homes & Gardens4 min read
Liquid Assets
Spanish designer Fernando Caruncho was ‘challenged to integrate the garden, architecture and landscape’ at his home-studio in Madrid. ‘The plan was very simple, perhaps even minimalist: two small cubes surrounded by a garden,’ he says. Fernando creat

Related