Lime green ceiling moldings blend, architectural relief remains in Istanbul apartment.

QYO Design Studio Transforms Istanbul Apartment with Bold Color Fields and Minimal Boundaries

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Written by Seth Sebastian

2026-06-17

In Istanbul, QYO Design Studio’s Prism 0000 redefines spatial division with bold, immersive color fields instead of traditional walls. The apartment unfolds through distinct chromatic zones: a vibrant lime green living area, dusty rose kitchen and entryway, and a deep burgundy bathroom.

Each field envelops the space from floor to ceiling, creating a seamless atmosphere. The lime green living room stands out with a striking geometric steel chandelier framed against the vivid ceiling, while a black leather sectional and black-and-white rug provide contrast.

In the kitchen, the color scheme continues with handmade yellow-pink tiles and lime yellow hardware, blending seamlessly with the living room’s acid palette. The space showcases yellow dome studs and star-shaped handles on cabinets, extending the visual dialogue across rooms.

Lime yellow star-shaped handles match tile glaze on cabinets.
Star-shaped handles are cast in the same lime yellow as the tile glaze — hardware as color extension, not contrast

Acting as a bridge between these zones, the entrance features dark bronze mirror panels that reflect the dusty rose walls. This design trick extends the space visually and conceptually, echoing the studio’s theme of constant reinterpretation through “reflection, light, and contact.”

Flush mirror panels create seamless spatial continuation on wall.
Mirror panels set flush to the wall — reflection reads as spatial continuation rather than a reflective object

Engaging spaces that challenge traditional design

Prism 0000 aligns with the modern shift toward color-driven interiors, yet it departs from maximalist trends by integrating color at the fundamental level of design. QYO challenges conventional room division, offering a continuous atmospheric experience.

For another take on minimalist Japanese interiors, see how a historic Miyakonojo home was transformed with an open-plan design, merging tradition with modernity.

Chandelier's geometry mirrors dome-stud pattern on kitchen cabinets.
The chandelier’s perforated geometry echoes the dome-stud pattern on the kitchen cabinet faces across two zones

In the bedroom, this approach culminates with saturated pink hues absorbing every surface, leaving a black platform bed as the solitary grounding object. A mounted textile adds a unique focal point, intentionally disrupting the chromatic continuity.

To explore color’s role in architecture further, discover how Sofia Pavilion uses bold colors to create a grounded architectural statement in São Paulo.

The bathroom concludes this color journey, where dusty rose deepens into a burgundy terrazzo landscape. Black fixtures serve as essential interventions, their contrast providing structural balance, while frameless mirrors seamlessly meld into the terrazzo grid.

Room features mirror, red armchair, black sofa, and striped rug.
room with full-height mirror, red cloud upholstered armchair, black leather sofa, striped rug, Istanbul apartmentThe full-height mirror doubles the room without adding a surface — the red chair appears twice, grounding both readings

Exploring the sustainability of vivid environments

Prism 0000 invites critical reflection: can an entirely chromatic environment remain livable in the long term? The apartment’s design highlights both the power and potential exhaustion of such immersive color fields, evident in the living room’s black-and-white rug, which quietly asserts the need for visual respite.

With a focus on dynamic color as a structural element, QYO Design Studio’s project challenges the norms of interior design, offering a fresh perspective on how we inhabit space.

Lone lingerie textile contrasts against expansive pink field.
The mounted lingerie textile is the apartment’s only figurative element — placed deliberately as a single rupture in the pink field
Mirror panels blend seamlessly into terrazzo grid, edges invisible.
Mirror panels grouted into the terrazzo grid — no frame, no edge, only a seam where reflection begins

Source: urdesignmag.com