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Seven dining rooms illuminated by voids that double as lightwells

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Gate Lodge

In our latest lookbook, we’ve rounded up homes spanning Chile, Ireland and Japan with dining rooms that are brightened by glass-covered voids.

Lightwells and internal voids offer a solution to drawing light into a home’s lower levels or deeper into its plan, while also adding visual intrigue and depth to an interior.

Here, we look at seven homes where glazed voids create brighter and loftier dining spaces, including a skylit pyramidal dwelling in Mexico.

This is the latest in our lookbooks series, which provides visual inspiration from Dezeen’s archive. For more inspiration, see previous lookbooks featuring compact bedrooms, statement fireplaces and bathrooms with contrasting materials.


Interior with large skylight
Photo by Marcos Zegers

House in the Forest, Chile, by Daiber & Aceituno Arquitectos

Chilean studio Daiber & Aceituno Arquitectos cloaked this two-storey home in corrugated metal and raised it atop concrete arches on its site in the forest of Puerto Varas, Chile.

On the home’s ground floor, an open-plan kitchen and dining room gain light from a central void designed by the studio to act as a “luminous heart within the home”.

Find out more about House in the Forest ›


Casa Emma
Photo by César Béjar

Casa Emma, Mexico, by HW Studio

A pyramidal lightwell draws daylight into the wood-clad interiors of Casa Emma, a Mexican home completed by local architecture practice HW Studio.

Nestled into an infill lot in Morelia, the residence measures four metres by 10 metres and is organised around a central skylit room that contains the kitchen, living and dining spaces, and a bedroom above.

Find out more about Casa Emma ›


Gate Lodge by A2 Architects
Photo by Peter Molloy

Gate Lodge, Ireland, by A2 Architects 

Irish studio A2 Architects designed this home, named Gate Lodge, with a minimal white form topped by a pyramidal roof for a young farming family in Navan, Ireland.

Inside, a circular void aligns with a square skylight at the apex of the pyramidal roof – drawing light down into the dining room at the centre of the home.

Find out more about Gate Lodge ›


Harvey Road Crouch End London by Erbar Mattes
Photo by Ståle Eriksen

Harvey Road, UK, by Erbar Mattes

Limewashed brick, oak and glass make up this rear extension to a London home completed by architecture studio Erbar Mattes.

Held within the space is an open-plan kitchen and living space flanked by a window seat and a dining space crowned with a deep-set skylight.

Find out more about Harvey Road ›


Interior of A Japanese Manga Artist's House by Tan Yamanouchi & AWGL
Photo by Katsumasa Tanaka

A Japanese Manga Artist’s House, Japan, by Tan Yamanouchi & AWGL

Architecture studio Tan Yamanouchi & AWGL drew on the creativity of its client – an up-and-coming manga artist – for the design of this house and studio with a curving facade in Tokyo, Japan.

Located on a narrow site, A Japanese Manga Artist’s House is accessed via an arched tunnel and opens up to a living space where a large void illuminates the home’s dining area.

Find out more about A Japanese Manga Artist’s House ›


Interior of Sky Lantern House by Proctor & Shaw
Photo by Ståle Eriksen

Sky Lantern, UK, by Proctor & Shaw

The refurbishment and extension of this Victorian townhouse in south London by local studio Proctor & Shaw saw a series of glazed volumes added to its rear facade to allow daylight to reach deep into the plan.

On the ground floor of Sky Lantern House, the open-plan kitchen and dining area are illuminated by a double-height void wrapped in glazing.

Find out more about Sky Lantern ›


Chelsea Mews House in London by Bindloss Dawes
Photo by Building Narratives

Chelsea Mews House, UK, by Bindloss Dawes

A full-height lightwell with an oak-and-steel staircase was added to this mews house in Chelsea, London, to create “a sense of volume and theatre”.

Designed by architecture firm Bindloss Dawes, the renovation of the Chelsea Mews House introduced a sunken basement level containing the kitchen and dining space, which is lit by the three-storey void.

Find out more about Chelsea Mews House ›

This is the latest in our lookbooks series, which provides visual inspiration from Dezeen’s archive. For more inspiration, see previous lookbooks featuring compact bedrooms, statement fireplaces and bathrooms with contrasting materials.

The post Seven dining rooms illuminated by voids that double as lightwells appeared first on Dezeen.

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