search
search

A tactile, design-led approach to wellbeing – the Artedomus bathroom

The bathroom is one of our most important sources for regeneration and personal renewal, and that centre for wellbeing can manifest in many different ways: bold in personality, a space of subtle refinement, earthy, organic, opulent and elevated. Whatever the direction that your bathroom might take, its the orchestration of surface finishes and bathroom furniture that brings your unique concept into being.

DSCF4361 copy.jpg

New directions in bathroom design are seeing architects and designers adopt a sophisticated approach to materiality, harnessing natural stone to bring new dimension to a space through sophisticated surface treatments across vanities, flooring and walls.

Silver Travertine bathroom floors and vanity at Armadale House by Selzer Design. Photography by Timothy Kaye.jpg

Silver Travertine bathroom floors and vanity at Armadale House by Selzer Design. Photography by Timothy Kaye.


Silver Travertine bathroom floors and vanity at Armadale House by Selzer Design. Photography by Timothy Kaye.jpg

Silver Travertine bathroom floors and vanity at Armadale House by Selzer Design. Photography by Timothy Kaye.

A clever interplay of textures is achieved by applying different surface finishes to singular materials; or in other cases selecting natural stones that offer multi-dimensional patterns and striations accentuated by naturally occurring tones of pinks, greens, greys and more – the colour possibilities can be quite extraordinary.

Grange Road Residence by Conrad Architects and Lauren Tarrant Design.jpg

Grigio Orsola slabs in acid etched finish to bathroom walls and floors with Calacatta Vagli crafted vanity. Grange Road Residence by Conrad Architects and Lauren Tarrant Design. Photography by Timothy Kaye.


FionaLynch_SthYarra_19.jpg

Aquarzo and Smeraldo at River House by Fiona Lynch Office. Photography by Sharyn Cairns.

Stone is wonderfully diverse as a bathroom material, stepping up the sense of opulence for a really luxurious space, or cleverly connecting the individual back to nature in a restful, retreat-like way.

Elba tiles and slabs. Private res in Lockleys, South Australia. Photography by Micky Pap Photo @mickypapphoto Michael Lipapis or Micky Lipapis 4.jpg

Elba tiles and slabs at private residence in Lockleys, South Australia. Photography by Micky Pap Photo.


Moonee Ponds Residence by Architecton.jpg

Artesserae Elba Split wall, Agape Lariana Bathtub, New Volumes Hurlysi side table by Thomas Coward and Elba Honed floor. Moonee Ponds Residence by Architecton. Photography by Dave Kulesza.

Of equal importance is your bathroom furniture, the main pieces, the purveyors of wellbeing, that quickly become the centrepiece of your bathing zone, and around which the rest of the bathroom’s design revolve.

Italian bathroom brand Agape, encapsulates the essence of Italian-ness, bringing this together with its distinctly architectural ethos to create bathroom furniture pieces that are at once artful, yet restrained and always sophisticated.

Mermaid Beach Residence ©ANDYMACPHERSON-4.jpg

Agape DR Bath in Natural Oak at Mermaid Beach House by Maher Design. Photography by Andy Macpherson


Mermaid Beach Residence ©ANDYMACPHERSON-6.jpg

Agape Dot Line Accessories at Mermaid Beach House by Maher Design. Photography by Andy Macpherson

Agape’s basin and bath collections empathetically respond to our needs and wants: hygiene and beauty blended together into an elevated story of wellness and rejuvenation. These design-led pieces command their space through artistic and sculptural forms, while delivering on function with joy, curiosity and an artful eye.

Agape accessories, too, offer an opportunity to not only acquire a piece of timeless design by the likes of Konstantin Grcic and Benedini Associati (both Agape collaborators), but to elevate the bathroom environment with a distinctly architectural dialogue – both visually pleasing and intuitively useful as you move about your everyday bathing functions.

Agape Bathroom.jpg

Agape Lariana Bath

Here we gather together 7 of our most popular natural stones and bathroom centrepieces for a modern and joyful bathroom experience.

1. Agape Bjhon 1 Basin

Bjhon Basins, conceived by Angelo Mangiarotti in 1970, extend the Agape bathing dialogue from indoors to out. This fabulously sculptural, yet eminently functional freestanding basin can be made in marble or stone – or using an advanced technological material, Cristalplant® biobased – for indoors. And for an outdoor bathing zone, Agape recommends a Petit Granit marble or Cemento finish.

Chifu 6179 with Agape Bjhon 1 basin, Revolving Moon mirror and Memory tap.jpg

Chifu 6179 with Agape Bjhon 1 basin, Revolving Moon mirror and Memory tap


Agape Bjhon 1

Agape Bjhon 1

2. Agape Immersion Bath

This bath is designed by Neri & Hu, whose uniquely global worldview sees the studio blend East and West influences as well as design disciplines to establish a new paradigm in architecture. This beautiful Immersion Bath, inspired by traditional timber bathing vessels used in Japan and China, offers a new and very enticing view on everyday bathing.

Agape Immersion Bath 01.jpg

Agape Immersion Bath 02.jpg

3. Agape Vieques Bath

First created for the W Hotel, a wellbeing oasis at Vieques Island, the Vieques Bath by Patricia Urquiola is now available to anyone looking to create their own wellbeing retreat. Teak accessories complement the bath, and you can create a wholistic Vieques experience by choosing the Vieques Pedestal or Counter Top basin, too.

Agape Vieques basin with INAX Rhythmic II. Vigneron House by Enoki. Photography by Jenah Piwanski.jpg

Agape Vieques basin with INAX Rhythmic II at Vigneron House in South Australia by Enoki. Photography by Jenah Piwanski.


p_10_Vieques.jpg

4. Agape Sen Shelves, Tapware and Accessories

Sen is a clever execution of bathroom accessories, solving the need for multiple functions in a single, essential line that houses independent components. These components can be freely combined while appearing cohesive thanks to Sen’s combination of Eastern spirit and Western technology. The outcome is a distinctive, quite architectural statement which is impressively versatile.

Agape Sen Accessories 2.jpg

Agape Sen collection


Agape Sen Accesories 1.jpg

Agape Sen collection

5. Agape Pear Basin

Patricia Urquiola’s Pear Basin is designed with soft yet clean lines, inspired by nature. The two-colour version of the Pear Basin, with white inside and dark grey outside, gives your bathroom an almost optical look.

Graphic House by Shaun Lockyer Architects

MAXIMUM Michelangelo walls and vanity with MAXIMUM Moon floor, Agape Memory Mirror, Agape Pear Basin and Agape Sen Tapware and Accessories. Graphic House by Shaun Lockyer Architects


Riverbend Residence Artedomus 1.jpg

Agape Pear Basin at River Bend Residence by InPlace.

6. Agape Vitruvio Mirrors

Bringing a sense of theatre to your bathroom mirror, García Cumini’s Vitruvio mirror presents as a circle inscribed in a square. Very classic, quite contemporary – dynamic when lit, quietly elegant when not.

24485344-DE39-4C62-9660-94B7C5AB47F5_1_201_a.jpg

Modular combination of Vitruvio Mirrors


088A6046.jpg

Agape Vitruvio Mirrors with DR bath and Arute Shinrin Pink tiles on the walls

7. Agape Ottocento Basin

Inspired by forms of the past, interpreted in the light of an essential aesthetic, the Ottocento family encompasses washbasins and bathtubs. The design of these beautiful pieces speak for themselves.

Ottocento Agape 2.jpg

Agape Ottocento Basin


Ottocento Agape.jpg

Agape Ottocento wall mounted basin

Like this article? Read up on the new architectural aesthetic for porcelain on kitchen benchtops.

Words by Alice Blackwood