Over the course of a 12 months, designer Luke Nicketto renovated a 1940s pink villa to turn into his new studio in Stockholm, Sweden. No indicators are displayed – it appears like an extraordinary home to the informal passer-by – however locals now know of it as Villa Roz. Whereas its pink exterior definitely piques curiosity, it is the inside that actually attracts you in.
Renovation and reworking of the house started in 2021, together with the inside design, which was executed in-house. From sofas to chairs to lighting to plant stands, a lot of the furnishings was designed by Luca himself.
In the lounge, the royal blue Arflex Banah couch seems with two further chairs and a daring yellow Float desk from La Probability.
On the bottom flooring, pale pink partitions set the tone and spotlight the outside of the home.
On the primary flooring is a gathering room with a black Railway desk from De Padova and black Robo chairs from Offecct. Coloured items of glass are displayed all through including extra shade and visible curiosity.
Upstairs is Luca’s private workplace and extra workspaces for the remainder of Nico’s workforce, together with a number of of his designs together with The Mjölk Réunion lamp (high) and the blue/gray Nico armchair from Bernhardt Design (backside).
![designer Luca Nichetto, sitting on a brown leather chair, looking out the window](https://design-milk.com/images/2023/01/Pink-Villa-Design-Studio-Stockholm-Luca-Nichetto-17-810x540.jpg)
Luca sitting on a Murano chair that he designed for Offecct
On weekdays, the Pink Villa is used as Nichetto Studio’s places of work after which on weekends the household makes use of it as a vacation dwelling within the nation. An previous storage has been transformed right into a visitor room, known as the Cabana, with its personal lounge, bed room and toilet with a Swedish sauna.
The brand new studio is only a seven-minute stroll from the water, and a inexperienced space, Branterna, is only a minute away, making it a peaceable place to work or go to.
Photographs by Max Rommel.