Calm Corners: five cosy minimalist interiors

st francis house fireplace detail
St Francis House, Hemingford Grey, Cambridgeshire
st francis house
St Francis House, Hemingford Grey, Cambridgeshire
warley close kitchen kitchen worktop made of Iroko lightly whitewashed brick walls floor glazed cut outs and view to balcony
Warley Close, London E10
warley close mezzanine bedroom glazed cut-outs illuminate the lightly whitewashed exposed brick walls
Warley Close, London E10
heron cottage kitchen full of natural materials like wood, jute and linen
Heron Cottage, Sudbourne, Suffolk
heron cottage reclaimed lighting, vintage furniture and textiles exposed floorboards
Heron Cottage, Sudbourne, Suffolk
Oscar Piccolo’s flat in south-east London
Oscar Piccolo’s flat in south-east London
Oscar Piccolo’s flat in south-east London
Oscar Piccolo’s flat in south-east London
Louisa Grey’s parred-back townhouse in Finsbury Park
Louisa Grey’s parred-back townhouse in Finsbury Park

The word ‘minimal’ can conjure up images of stark walls and hard surfaces, but taking a pared-back approach to interiors needn’t lack warmth. Here, we’ve looked through our homes for sale, as well as some past highlights to select some of our favourite cosy minimalist interiors, found in such buildings as former workhouse cottages and a converted industrial warehouse.

St Francis House, Hemingford Grey, Cambridgeshire
“I was seeing trends come and go, which made want to stick with really good quality materials and timeless forms that hold up over the years. You don’t want to regret putting in 18th-century fireplaces – you have to trust they will be right well into the future,” said interior stylist Anna McDougall when we visited her at the elegantly-restrained home she designed for her family in Cambridgeshire.

Her commitment to the well-made keeps what’s in the house creating a tight-edit of quality pieces, matched with age-old materials and a neutral colour scheme. The result is a timeless-feeling interior that, while firmly in the ‘less is more’ camp, is liveable and cosy thanks to tactile textiles, plant life, material contrasts and light-filled spaces.

Warley Close, London E10
You’d be hard-pressed to find many industrial conversions that could be described as cosy but this warehouse in east London manages to make its cavernous interiors feel welcoming and warm. Floor-to-ceiling cupboards sit snugly along the sides, leaving plenty of room for circulation, while the glazed cut-outs in the floor above illuminate the lightly whitewashed walls of exposed brick.

The kitchen worktop runs efficiently along a single wall and is made of Iroko; an African hardwood that adds a copper hue to the building’s concise palette. The minimal interventions leave room for creative activity while including intimate pockets of private space.

Heron Cottage, Sudbourne, Suffolk
Creating cosy minimalist interiors is not about taking things away, it’s about scrutinising what things bring you happiness and joy at home, including that which improves your wellbeing and saying goodbye to stuff that doesn’t.  

At Heron Cottage, a pair of former workhouse cottages in Suffolk, this has been done to beautiful effect. You’ll find no plastic in the kitchen – instead, natural materials like wood, jute and linen form the palette – and elsewhere arrays of found objects, reclaimed lighting, vintage furniture and textiles work with a background comprised of exposed floorboards, beams and wall joists. The effect, we imagine, is a house that feels alive with the intentions and interests of its owners – and if that isn’t cosy, we don’t know what is.

Oscar Piccolo’s flat, London SE18
“This space is full of things that I appreciate as objects… I like that most of what’s here has a story, and isn’t just a collection of pretty things,” said designer Oscar Piccolo when we visited him at home for our My Modern House series.

His compact studio flat calls for a strict no-clutter policy but nevertheless bears the young designer’s signature aesthetic thanks to a mix of curvaceous sculptures, earthy tones and pieces made by his own hand, including the Lampada Cappello lamp. The lesson here is that a small space doesn’t need to be crowded to feel cosy – having just a few meaningful pieces is enough to make a house a home.

Louisa Grey’s townhouse, London N4
Interior designer Louisa Grey’s design studio, House of Grey, emphasise high-quality, natural and sustainable materials in their elegantly-simple projects that bring together classic design pieces, craftmanship and a minimal sensibility.

Her home, a refurbished townhouse in north London, is a realisation of all of those elements, with Louisa opting for Douglas Fir panelling in the kitchen, bespoke cornicing throughout, and a concentrated selection of design pieces – such as a Faye Toogood Spade chair and an Atollo Murano lamp – all curated under a thoughtful eye for detail. A reminder to spend well on quality, not quantity.

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