This top-floor apartment in a red-brick 1890s building in Knightsbridge was entirely reimagined as a deeply personal interior rooted in materiality and memory. Once untouched for decades, the flat was transformed through a careful reconfiguration of its bones, kitchen repositioned, volumes opened, and circulation clarified, while reclaimed herringbone oak parquet replaced worn flooring. Walls were treated with textured stucco to absorb and reflect light with subtle variation, creating warmth and depth throughout the main living spaces. Custom-designed elements anchor the interior: a built-in sofa in palm wood veneer wraps the living room, bespoke shelving and cabinetry integrate seamlessly into the architecture, and a eucalyptus burl bed defines the primary bedroom. Bathrooms are layered in travertine, marble, and bespoke finishes, balancing theatricality with restraint. The result is an apartment that feels intimate and storied, where craftsmanship, patina, and collected objects exist in quiet harmony.