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Our Work

At Allanberry Rooms, every project is designed around real people, real needs, and real daily life.
Our work focuses on creating sensory-friendly spaces that support emotional regulation, focus, comfort, and wellbeing across homes, schools, and workplaces.

A Warm, Sensory-Led Loft, Seoul
(Service: Home Design Package)

This loft apartment was designed to feel calm, warm, and connected. Soft lighting, natural textures, and a restrained colour palette create a comfortable atmosphere, while clearly defined living, dining, and kitchen areas support practical everyday routines.

A Shared Bedroom for Siblings, Seoul
(Service: Room Design Package)

This shared sibling bedroom was designed to give both children a stronger sense of ownership within one connected space. Personal lighting control, warmer evening tones, flexible privacy, equal access to natural light, and larger shared storage all helped create a room that feels calmer, fairer, and easier to share.

A Living Room Oriented Around Family, Seoul
(Service: Room Design Package)

With inward-facing seating, layered soft textures, and gentle indirect lighting, this project was designed to encourage family time and create a living room that feels warm, calm, and easy to stay in. The layout brings the seating arrangement closer together to support conversation and connection, while the softer materials help the room feel more inviting and comfortable.

Calm Corner Design, Seoul
(Service: Room Design Package)

This project was designed as a calm, comfortable corner for everyday life. Warm lighting, soft textures, and a balanced layout help the space feel quiet, grounded, and easy to use. It shows how even a small area can be shaped to support rest, focus, and a greater sense of ease at home.

Two-Room Officetel Redesign, Seoul
(Service: Home Design Package)

This home was designed for a busy couple in Seoul who wanted their apartment to feel like a retreat from the outside world. The design reduces stimulation through warm lighting, natural materials, and calm spaces that support rest, conversation, and music. The result is a home where the pace of the city can be left at the door.

ADHD Sensory-Friendly Child’s Bedroom Design, Seoul
(Service: Child Design Package)

This bedroom was designed for a child with ADHD, taking into account sensory sensitivity, emotional regulation, and daily routines. The space uses clear functional zones for rest, movement, and focus, combined with soft lighting, natural elements, and personalised design features to support calmness and stability.

School Sensory Transition Space, Seoul
(Service: Sensory Support Room Design)

This project redesigns a small school space to support students during transitions between activities. The design focuses on a calm transition zone where students can pause, regulate emotions, and prepare for the next activity. Soft lighting, low visual stimulation, and a spiral circulation path help create a predictable and supportive environment.

Sensory-Friendly Bedroom for Light Sensitivity, Seoul
(Service: Child Design Package)

 

This bedroom was redesigned to support a child with strong light sensitivity. The space includes a calming safe zone, blackout sensory tent, soft layered lighting, and clear spatial zoning to help the child regulate emotions, reduce visual overload, and feel secure at home.

Design Philosophy

Every person experiences space differently.
There is no one-size-fits-all solution, so we design around your unique needs.

Small changes can make a big difference.
A full renovation is not always necessary.

Design should do more than just look good — it should support wellbeing.
Spaces should help people feel comfortable, productive, and emotionally supported.

Neurodivergence means that everyone’s brain works in different ways. It includes people with autism, ADHD, or strong sensory sensitivity. It reminds us that not everyone experiences or reacts to the world the same way — and that’s okay. Each person may need a different kind of space to feel their best.

In 1972, occupational therapist A. Jean Ayres created the Sensory Integration Theory. It explains how our brain takes in and organizes information from our senses — like sound, light, touch, and movement. Because of this process, we can control ourselves, stay focused, and react well to what happens around us. When our environment supports our senses, we can feel calm and comfortable. But if it doesn’t, we might feel tired, distracted, or uneasy.

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