LTOO Whole-Home Customization Experience Center by BDSD Boundless Design

Positioned on a prominent street corner in Huizhou, the LTOO Whole-Home Customisation Experience Center by BDSD Boundless Design rethinks the showroom as a lived-in, architectural setting.

Guided by a disciplined focus on geometry, light and an open construction logic, the interior moves beyond conventional product display to present LTOO’s offer as a cohesive domestic environment shaped by structure, proportion and atmosphere.

At the urban edge, restrained geometric volumes and horizontal window bands help the building sit comfortably within its neighbourhood, while the corner condition is sharpened into a clear visual marker. Arrival is mediated by an L-shaped screen built with a mortise-and-tenon approach, filtering daylight and sightlines while introducing a crafted layer of spatial depth. This threshold sets up an interior quality that feels open and continuous, where architectural clarity supports a softer, more inhabitable mood.

Inside, construction is treated as a primary design language. A relocated stair is placed beneath a tall vertical window, turning circulation into a sculptural centrepiece animated by shifting light and shadow. A crisp white half-wall conceals the stair base to emphasise the floating geometry above, while a full-height white column and a concrete crossbeam establish a stable order across both levels, giving the space a sense of strength without visual heaviness.

The ground floor adopts a free-plan strategy, connecting living, kitchen cabinetry and walk-in wardrobe zones into a single field defined by custom furniture rather than hard partitions. A feature-wall system operates as an architectural element in its own right, reinforcing the idea of customisation as part of the building’s fabric. Product moments are integrated into everyday scenarios, from an embedded cat house and seating unit to cabinetry showcasing varied opening mechanisms, with a measured hit of vivid red bringing warmth to an otherwise rational palette.

Light remains central throughout, guided in through horizontal and vertical openings to shape material perception and spatial focus. In the display areas, illumination washes across surfaces to reveal texture and colour, while a linear light element runs from ceiling to floor as a vertical accent that intersects with beams and structural lines. A tea room is placed where daylight is most generous, with its form extending from the crossbeam and a sliding art door enabling different uses, while a pared-back study conceals functions to support concentration. Across the project, modular control, structural legibility and refined lighting combine to align commerce with architectural intent, offering a contemporary living sample that feels both precise and emotionally resonant.

Photography by Hanmo Vision(Yi Gao)


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