How to Add Architectural Interest to a Plain UK Interior Through Furniture
Many modern British homes are built as simple boxes with flat ceilings, square rooms and smooth walls that can feel characterless, and while panelling or joinery is one answer it is costly and permanent. This guide shows how furniture offers a flexible alternative that introduces shape, height and rhythm without any building work. We explain how tall bookcases break up flat walls, how a statement cabinet or sideboard becomes the focal point a plain room lacks, and how curves and contrasting materials soften rigid geometry. There is advice on using console tables to define zones, layering lamps and wall lights to cast the shadow that reveals form, and borrowing classical symmetry through matching pairs and repetition. Throughout, we stress the importance of scale, because a few confident, well proportioned pieces will always read as more deliberate than a crowd of small objects. The result is a featureless space given the character its architecture never offered....