Architonic projects of the year 2023: Residential
Our annual review of the most popular new living spaces in Architonic’s project database. Featuring Child Studio, Plus One Architects, Luke Moloney Architecture, Objektor Architekti and AKZ Architectura.
December 4, 2023 | 11:00 pm CUT

Child Studio’s inspiration for the Mayfair Residence came from Yves Saint Laurent’s Grand Salon at Rue de Babylone in Paris. Photo: Felix Speller & Child Studio
When it came to renovations, the focus was on reuse rather than replace


A series of crafted wooden library walls subdivide the Mayfair Residence interior into various zones including the lounge, dining and study areas. Photos: Felix Speller & Child Studio
Mayfair Residence in London, UK, by Child Studio
Child Studio was commissioned to create a residence for a London-based hotelier and restauranteur, with the spaces to dine, host parties and entertain. Tucked away in a historic mews courtyard of London’s Mayfair district, the secluded site presented a blank canvas for the designers Che Huang and Alex Kos.

In combination with its subtle colour palette, the exposed original paintwork in the Karlovy Vary apartment creates strong and bold imagery in each room. Photos: Radek Úlehla
Karlovy Vary Apartment in Karlovy Vary, Czech Republic, by Plus One Architects
Overlooking a green hillside near Karlovy Vary’s picturesque colonnades and Hotel Thermal, this historic 1900s apartment featured several well-preserved features. The main objective of the renovation was to ‘remove the accumulation of disparate structures, tiles, ceilings and layout changes. To clean the passages and return the apartment back to its original dimensions and atmosphere,’ explain Plus One Architects.The Estate in New South Wales, Australia, by Luke Moloney Architecture
‘Built in the 1880s for a prominent pastoral family, The Estate was once at the centre of a vast working farm with attendant outbuildings, stables, kitchen gardens and a general store serving early European settlements in the area,’ introduce the project’s architects Luke Moloney Architecture. Time had not been kind to the house and buildings, and after it passed into the hands of a young family relocating from the city, its new owners faced a substantial amount of work to make it shine once more.Time had not been kind to the house and buildings


Onvenecká 33’s main communal space features a terrazzo composition with a concrete bar dictating its centre of gravity (top, middle) while a built-in woven throne dominates a sunny entrance space. Photos: BoysPlayNice
Ovenecká 33 in Prague, Czech Republic, by Objektor Architekti
By ‘incorporating various oddities and materialised childhood dreams into a minimalist base’, explains Ovenecká 33 architect, Objektor Architekti, the apartment became an extremely personal project. ‘We experimented with different stylistic elements and the boundaries between private and public space. I knew right away that I wanted to create a space that was shared, open and permeable, while still containing hidden corners and secrets. A space where you never have to return along the same route. A space that is distinctive yet always changing like a gallery or theatre stage, or like me.’‘A space that is distinctive yet always changing like a gallery or theatre stage, or like me’

Natural materials and subdued colours in the Rita Apartment blend with its considered flow of natural light. Photos: Lesha Yanchenkov and Katya Zuieva
Rita Apartment in Kyiv, Ukraine, by AKZ Architectura
Before the design process of the Rita Apartment’s renovation works began, the space had no partitions and all its windows faced only one side, but when architects AKZ Architecture were briefed by the client, they were asked to create a kitchen, living room, bedroom and office, all filled with natural light.Catch up on Architonic’s most popular residential projects from previous years here:
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