Skip to main content

Note

Furniture selections throughout are purposefully curated to echo the building’s architectural energy while grounding the home in everyday comfort.

Note

Thoughtfully placed art, lighting and soft furnishings add warmth and personality, balancing the sleek finishes and reinforcing a sophisticated yet welcoming atmosphere.

Note

Something to say here as a captions alongside an image that will help for SEO purposes as well as guidance through the project.

Area

Battersea Power Station

details

2,870 sq ft
£4,000,000

photographer

Tony Murray

the gehry building

When you enter The Gehry Building, you immediately feel a sense of modern architectural confidence tempered by thoughtful interior styling that enhances its sculptural context. Designed within Frank Gehry’s first completed UK residential project, the interiors lend themselves to a contemporary aesthetic that complements the dynamic forms and light‑filled spaces characteristic of his work. 

The furniture selections throughout are purposefully curated to echo the building’s architectural energy while grounding the home in everyday comfort. In the main living areas, seating pieces are sleek yet welcoming. Low‑profile sofas and sculptural chairs create zones that feel both relaxed and refined. These choices reinforce the apartment’s fluid circulation and capitalise on floor‑to‑ceiling glazing and expansive views, allowing the furniture to feel integrated with the space rather than simply placed within it. 

The furniture palette leans into natural woods, soft upholsteries and subtle metallic accents, which bring warmth and tactility to the interiors without distracting from the architectural lines. Occasional tables and consoles have been selected for their sculptural qualities — they feel like deliberate complements to Gehry’s architectural language rather than mere functional pieces. This approach ensures each vignette feels purposeful and elevated, reinforcing a sense of curated modern living.

Dining and multi‑use spaces are articulated with streamlined tables and chairs that marry form and function — the pieces feel equally suited to quiet evenings at home as to entertaining. Their simple, elegant profiles allow light to move freely, enhancing the sense of openness that is so vital in contemporary staging.

The overall effect is one of effortless sophistication. The furniture doesn’t compete with the building’s dramatic silhouette or its striking position within the Battersea Power Station development; instead, it enhances the experience of living within such a distinctive architectural context. Through considered layering, scale‑aware selection and a restrained yet enriching palette, the styling at The Gehry Building presents a narrative of refined, contemporary city living — one that feels both aspirational and entirely tangible to prospective buyers.