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Small-Space Living with a Parisian-Inspired Twist

This 47m² Moscow apartment channels old-world European charm through clever planning and layered design

By Olivia Vergunst | March 27, 2026 | Category interiors/house-tours

In the Moscow residential complex ENITEO, a compact 47-square-metre apartment challenges every assumption about small-space living. Designed for a young woman with a clear vision, the brief was ambitious: to create an interior that feels like a spacious, timeworn European apartment — despite the constraints of a new-build footprint.

The result is a home that feels layered, intuitive and quietly characterful, where clever spatial planning meets a distinctly lived-in aesthetic.

A compact interior reimagined with layered textures and classic European character, balancing charm with spatial clarity

Rewriting the Rules of a New Build

From the outset, the client’s references pointed firmly towards classic European interiors — generous in scale, rich in detail and full of personality. Translating that into 47 square metres required more than decoration; it demanded a complete rethinking of layout.

“I went further and created a circular layout,” the designer explains, turning a conventional plan into a fluid, interconnected sequence of spaces. Movement becomes intuitive, with each area leading naturally into the next — an approach that not only maximises functionality but enhances the sense of openness.

The apartment now allows access to the hallway through the walk-in wardrobe and bathroom, while guests can use the bathroom without passing through the bedroom — a subtle yet significant improvement in everyday living.

Designing for Flow and Freedom

The client’s desire “to open all the doors and move freely throughout the apartment” shaped many of the key design decisions. Sliding doors, concealed entry points and multifunctional zones allow the space to shift depending on how it is used.

A walk-through wardrobe connects the bedroom to the bathroom, creating a hotel-like experience, while a mirrored wall discreetly conceals both the bathroom entrance and the refrigerator — maintaining clean sightlines throughout.

Sliding doors and concealed entries create flexibility, maintaining clean lines while maximising movement

Near the entrance, a walk-in closet doubles as a laundry room, proving that even the most practical requirements can be elegantly integrated.

A Kitchen That Blends In

Rather than separating the kitchen entirely, the designer introduced a bar counter that performs multiple roles. Functional on the kitchen side and serving as a dining table on the other, it creates a natural transition between cooking and living spaces without interrupting the flow.

This kind of dual-purpose thinking runs throughout the apartment, ensuring that every square metre works harder without feeling overdesigned.

A multifunctional bar counter bridges kitchen and living, blending dining, prep and social spaces with ease

Atmosphere Over Aesthetics

While the layout solves the practical challenges, it is the material palette that gives the apartment its distinct character. The walls are finished in a complex grey-yellow plaster — a choice that required “a lot of debate and paint jobs” before landing on the final tone.

The result is subtle and atmospheric, blurring the line between new and old. “Ultimately, the colour and material turned out very well… it’s hard to tell the apartment is in the middle of nowhere,” the designer notes.

Windows have been left as open as possible, framing views of the surrounding park and allowing natural light to soften the interior throughout the day.

Soft plaster walls and open windows create an atmospheric interior where light and tone shape the mood

Vintage Meets Contemporary

To achieve the desired lived-in feel, the interior layers contemporary pieces with vintage finds. Custom-built furniture and doors, made to the designer’s sketches, ensure precision and cohesion, while vintage lamps, side tables and collected artworks introduce warmth and individuality.

A bookcase — a key element in the client’s brief — anchors the living space, offering room to grow a personal library over time. Nearby, a comfortable sofa and carefully selected lighting create an inviting, intimate atmosphere.

In the bedroom, a freestanding bath paired with a simple shower curtain delivers on the client’s wish for a more romantic, European-style bathroom experience, while maintaining practicality within the compact footprint.

Vintage pieces and custom joinery layer warmth and personality into a compact yet expressive living space

Small Space, Big Thinking

What sets this apartment apart is not just its aesthetic, but the clarity of its planning. Every decision — from the circular layout to the concealed storage — is driven by a desire to make the space feel larger, more fluid and more personal.

The result is a home that defies its size. It feels open without being sparse, curated without being staged, and above all, lived in

Credits

Designer: Elena Makhrova,  @lena_makhrova

Photographer: Mikhail Loskutov, @loskutoff

Stylist: Yes We May, @yes_we_may