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Eight eclectic interiors enhanced by striking accent walls

Blotchy slate tiles, playfully patterned murals and a single oversized circle form these eye-catching interior accent walls that we have collected for our latest lookbook.

An accent or feature wall is one that differs in colour, material or texture from the other walls that surround it. Accent walls can feature in both interior and exterior locations.

Architects and designers often use these statement walls to delineate different spaces in a room, or simply to create striking and joyful interior details.

From a New York apartment to a Helsinki teahouse, here are eight eclectic interiors defined by eye-catching accent walls.

This is the latest in our lookbooks series, which provides visual inspiration from Dezeen’s archive. For more inspiration see previous lookbooks featuring offbeat bakeries, inviting entrance halls and homes with split-level living areas.


Photo is by A Avdeenko

Heat 360, Ukraine, by Azovskiy & Pahomova Architects

This house in the Dnepropetrovsk region of Ukraine features a bedroom with a dark slate-tile wall defined by dramatic rust blotches.

Azovskiy & Pahomova Architects made the adjacent wall from floor-to-ceiling glazing that illuminates the room’s earthy-hued interiors.

Find out more about Heat 360 ›


Photo is by Prue Ruscoe

Polychrome House, Australia, by Amber Road and Lymesmith

An abstract mural packed with colourful geometric shapes covers one of the walls in the living space at Polychrome House in Sydney.

The bold interiors are enhanced by graphic paved floors and a mismatch of bright furniture in hues ranging from burnt orange to sea green.

Find out more about Polychrome House ›


Photo is by Dylan Chandler

New York apartment, USA, by Harry Nuriev and Tyler Billinger

Designer Harry Nuriev and partner Tyler Billinger – both of Crosby Studios – renovated their New York home with Nuriev’s “signature boldness”.

A white-tiled accent wall features in the otherwise colourful bedroom, which features a plush gold-lame headboard and ultraviolet elements including a hand-shaped bedside lamp.

Find out more about this New York apartment ›


Photo is by Aleksi Tikkala

Teemaa, Finland, by Yatufo

A combination of traditional flat bricks and grooved bricks comes together in the tasting room of Helsinki’s Teemaa teahouse to create an eclectic accent wall.

Design studio Yatufo aimed to reference the raw tactility of tea leaves when creating the interiors, which are also characterised by elements of oak and oxidised steel.

Find out more about Teemaa ›


Photo is by José Hevia

Casa A12, Spain, by Lucas y Hernández-Gil

The white floors and sheets in the bedroom suite at Casa A12 form a neutral backdrop for a large cobalt blue dot circle that creates a playful feature wall.

Local studio Lucas y Hernández-Gil added various other space-delineating accents to the Madrid apartment, including swathes of silvery curtains and corrugated metal partitions.

Find out more about Casa A12 ›


Photo is by Serhii Kadulin

Shkrub, Ukraine, by Sergey Makhno

Built by architect Sergey Makhno for him and his family, the Shkrub house includes a feature wall made up of rows of rounded ceramic tiles that resemble jumbo fish scales.

These were made from several types of clay finish that were usually mixed with flax seeds, rye and wheat in accordance with Ukrainian traditions.

Find out more about Shkrub ›


Photo is by David Mitchell

Chelsea Pied-à-Terre, USA, by Stadt Architecture

Decadence takes centre stage at this renovated New York apartment in the form of a green bedroom mural that is “dripping” with globules of gold paint.

Covering an entire wall and moving up into the ceiling, the design was created by Brooklyn-based Calico Wallpaper and references the lush nature of Vancouver’s Stanley Park – a location that is meaningful to the dwelling’s Canadian occupants.

Find out more about Chelsea Pied-à-Terre ›


Photo is by Alexandria Hall

582 Rydon Street, London, by Moxon Architects

British studio Moxon Architects renovated a Victorian townhouse in north London’s Islington area by adding a sunken garden and minimalist interiors.

Throughout the home, subtle reminders of its early 19th-century history were inserted into the design. These include a floral gridded feature wall in the primary bedroom.

Find out more about 582 Rydon Street ›

This is the latest in our lookbooks series, which provides visual inspiration from Dezeen’s archive. For more inspiration see previous lookbooks featuring offbeat bakeries, inviting entrance halls and homes with split-level living areas.


Source: Rooms - dezeen.com


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