International Home Tour

Tour a Milan Apartment That Looks Like It Could Be in the British Countryside

The eclectic home is filled with antiques, ceramics, and oil portraits from the 1800s

Even the bathrooms reflect the couple’s passion for all things British. “The fixtures have this clean, vintage feel. It was crucial for us to have a tub, and since we didn’t have that much space, we wanted a deep one. We created a niche around it to create depth. It’s an idea we picked up, if I’m not mistaken, on a trip to Marrakech,” says Mauro. “For the second smaller bath, we used Cole & Son’s Savuti pattern, named after one of South Africa’s most beloved national parks. It’s a wonderful garden to remind us of the country.” 

Notably, the couple’s eclectic sense of style extends to less conventional areas of the home. “We didn’t want a kitchen that looked like, well, a typical kitchen,” Mauro explains. “That’s why we had cabinetry installed up to the ceiling. It’s not a classic Italian kitchen, in other words, but another room where you happen to cook. We then added a Carrara marble countertop and Smeg appliances, with their exquisite retro look,” he adds. 

Ultimately, the room reflects the couple’s love of the color blue, which is sprinkled throughout the apartment. “It’s a color you find everywhere. It is masculine, feminine, warm, elegant,” he says. Perhaps not surprisingly, the couple also collects Meissen pottery, with its signature blue-and-white designs. 

Jürgen and Mauro seated in their Milanese living room.

The large Maria Theresa chandelier with 25 lights is from the early 1900s. Mauro and Jürgen restored it and then, in order to install it, had to reinforce the ceiling. “We decorated it with shades that are painted gold inside. We use the chandelier often, and the light is soft, warm, and beautiful. We couldn’t live with harsher light.”

Passion, patience, and details: This is how the magical atmosphere of this home, which feels suspended in time, was created. 

A view of the dining room.

Blue china can be glimpsed in a dining room cabinet. 

The repurposed red-marble mantle is from Languedoc in France. The Chinese vases are antiques.

Blue and white vases and 19th-century portraits are found throughout the apartment. 

The wallpaper is from Cole & Son’s Savuti collection.

Many shades of blue are found throughout the apartment, including its kitchen. 

The wooden cabinet seen here, inherited from Jürgen’s family, comes from South Africa. It holds some of the couple’s china collection.

A sea green retreat.

Books make this corner even cozier.

All the furniture in the bedroom are antique finds. “While I can often be slow to make a decision, we bought the brass bed on an impulse. An antiques dealer friend of ours was delivering a mirror when we noticed this beautiful bed in the truck,” says Mauro.

The couple, en plein air.

A closer look at their outdoors set up.