homedsgn logo homedsgn logo

Apartment in Vienna by Atelier Karasinski

By • Nov 16, 2014

This 1,615-square-foot studio apartment is located in Vienna, Austria.

It was designed for and by Atelier Karasinski in 2014.

Apartment in Vienna by Atelier Karasinski (1)
Apartment in Vienna by Atelier Karasinski (2)
Apartment in Vienna by Atelier Karasinski (3)
Apartment in Vienna by Atelier Karasinski (4)
Apartment in Vienna by Atelier Karasinski (5)
Apartment in Vienna by Atelier Karasinski (6)
Apartment in Vienna by Atelier Karasinski (7)
Apartment in Vienna by Atelier Karasinski (8)
Apartment in Vienna by Atelier Karasinski (9)
Apartment in Vienna by Atelier Karasinski (10)
Apartment in Vienna by Atelier Karasinski (11)
Apartment in Vienna by Atelier Karasinski (12)
Apartment in Vienna by Atelier Karasinski (13)
Apartment in Vienna by Atelier Karasinski (14)
Apartment in Vienna by Atelier Karasinski (15)
Apartment in Vienna by Atelier Karasinski (16)
Apartment in Vienna by Atelier Karasinski (17)

Apartment in Vienna by Atelier Karasinski:

“This whole apartment was refurnished on our own. The kitchen was covered with new white ‘Metro’ tiles. The bathroom sink is an unique self-made designer piece, build out of an old Singer sewing machine and a marble basin from Cooke & Lewis London.

Stucco work and colors have been done additionally, wooden floor was polished professionally. Almost the whole furniture & decor is second hand or vintage, carefully collected over 8 months all over Vienna, Paris, Barcelona, San Francisco, parts of Poland & New York.

We also bought some designer pieces into place like some Eames lounge chairs, a Nisse Strinning ‘String’ shelf, an Acapulco chair from Mexico and some Egon Eiermann tables. Never done, still in the making.”





Photos courtesy of Atelier Karasinski

You may use j/k/arrow keys to navigate through the articles

One Comment to Apartment in Vienna by Atelier Karasinski
  1. Dunacsilla says:

    Cozy at the best, but neither stylish, nor professional, nor timeless. Not even orderly. A collection trashy retrostuff, combined in an utmost boring way. Why was it presented here?

Share your Thoughts