Synonyms for ‘dark’ read like a who’s who of negativity. Words like ‘gloom’, ‘murk’, and ‘despair’ are a world away from the light and airy interiors we’re told to covet by magazines and influencers. But for many people who look for tranquillity in the bathroom, there is comfort to be found in the dark.
Many of us tend to close our eyes while searching for peace and mindfulness. In turning off the sense of sight we can retreat inside of ourselves, and focus on our own self-care. These four dark bathrooms from the ArchDaily catalog use this theory of peaceful darkness to create calming bathrooms with low, ambient lighting; natural materials, and dark surfaces.
Black is Back / 33bY Architecture
In order to create a cozy atmosphere, the Black is Back apartment in Kyiv, Ukraine, chooses to balance the dark colors of an expansive material palette – including brick, African black stone, leather, and wood – with light and reflective details such as copper tapware, a copper niche in the shower and ambient lighting.
‘Entering the apartment, the first thing we notice is the wall made of black structural stone,’ explain the architects, 33bY Architecture. The ‘bathroom is made in the overall style of the apartment, with black sanitary ware and blue shelving with built-in LED lights.’ A smaller guest bathroom, meanwhile, is finished entirely in black. Using a smart glass system, the open-plan apartment can either combine or separate its living, sleeping, and even bathroom spaces with partitioning that can transform from transparent to opaque.
Varanda Apartment / Estudio Guto Requena
When one sense is blocked, the others are enhanced. So in keeping bathroom surfaces dark and lighting low, the luxurious touch of velvety bath water and floral scents from the natural world emerge stronger through the shadows in a spa-like bathroom.
Instead of prioritizing light or dark, the Varanda Apartment in Sao Paolo, Brazil, chooses to focus on the natural tones and filtered air provided by the country’s tropical plantlife, becoming ‘an apartment immersed in a real urban forest,’ as the architects, Estudio Guto Requena, explain.
Artificially lit with ambient light from a combination of sources behind mirrors and under shelving and cabinets, the apartment’s bathrooms, edged by natural surfaces such as dark wood and climbing greenery, feature a soft glow similar to the dappled light that makes its way through to the forest floor.
Industrial Loft / Francesco Meneghello
Before humanity learned the abilities and technologies to design and build homes and spaces of our own, naturally-curved caves were where we chose to draw comfort, peace, and security. With its rough textured grey walls, surfaces and furniture, and minimalist decorative touches throughout, the Industrial Loft project in London, UK, exemplifies the meditative environment created by the dark.
‘This raw and brutal space,’ begins the designer, Francesco Meneghello, was ‘carved with lights and shadow. Using minimal details to compose a narrative that is never unique but free and multi-faceted.’ In the en-suite bathroom on the loft’s mezzanine floor, a dramatic white marble sink, carved ‘per levare’ from a single block of stone, introduces the space as if under a spotlight on a stage.
Interlude House / Ayutt and Associates design
Although the Interlude House cuts a daunting presence from the outside – like a black hole, the structure appears to draw in surrounding light – once inside, drawn-in visitors are treated to an open space filled with colorful artworks and natural light, ‘exploding into an oasis filled with light, gradually fading in from the darkness,’ introduce the architects, Ayutt and Associates design (AAd).
‘The house is nothing short of a piece of set design, full of smoke and mirrors and choreographed to entertain through a precise series of events.’ One of the house’s showpiece features reserved only for the owners, however, is the master bathroom.
A sculptural, all-black bathtub sits alone in the center of the space, surrounded by the rich, full-bodied color of matured green marble. Washed with the light of a glass-block wall in the daytime, the sensorial bath is instead soaked with a blanket of night in the evenings, when the house is at its most silent.