Inspired Kitchen CGI Collection

Here’s another gorgeous set of seven kitchen interiors created for one of our clients. Our interior design team collaborated with the client to plan and style these images with careful consideration selecting the cabinetry and surfaces, pairing them with popular interior styles and trends. Our skilled 3D team have taken care to recreate the each concept with some of the specialist furnishings and props being 3D modelled in-house. Additional cameo images have also been commissioned displaying alternative angles, LED lighting setups and cabinetry internal features.

Interior scenes use 3D Studio Max and are rendered with Corona Renderer. With additional modelling in Z-Brush and 3DSMax, image composition and colour grades completed in Fusion Studio. Additional tweaks, colour accuracy adjustments and photography comps were completed using Photoshop.

EUPEN VILLAGE

Eupen village is a project consisting of several multifunctional buildings located in Eupen, Belgium.

The buildings consist of residential areas (apartments) as well as public areas (co-working spaces and shops). Various shops are located on the ground floors of the buildings. Special attention has been given to atmospheric and comfortable outdoor public spaces.

The 3d visualization of the architectural project was made for the architectural bureau A2M.

Enjoy the view!

https://www.behance.net/Aleks_Suharukov
https://www.instagram.com/provisual.pro/
https://www.facebook.com/ProvisualPro/


https://www.youtube.com/c/Provisual3Dstudio

Moniker

Site Plan Rendering is a type of a bird view when the object is depicted from a great height at an angle of 90 degrees, what is almost perpendicular to the main facility. This type of visualization shows the way the object itself interacts with the environment, how it is arranged in it, and what elements and constructions will be nearby. In addition, it creates fascinating and eye-catching image.
​​​​​
MORE PROJECTS ON: https://omegarender.com/gallery

Bali Q-Bit

We continue to share renderings from the project on the island of Bali. In the last
post, it was a gated community village, and now we will show you the nooks and crannies of the City of Future.

The Bali project was created as a conceptual project in which we imagined the conditions and infrastructure under which the “person of the future” could live. The Bali site was chosen as a comfortable place to build first the Village, and then the City of the Future.

We called our project Q-Bit, which is a basic unit of quantum information that defines the minimum computing quantum power. Thus, our idea was based on the fact that progress is inevitable, and it must proceed in unison with the three elements of our life: nature, humanity, and a high-powered computer.
​​​​​
MORE PROJECTS ON: https://omegarender.com/gallery

Archviz through Culture | I – Lotus Temple, India

Archviz through Culture is a collection of five projects, where each chapter recreates and represents an architectural piece throught CGI, as a manifest to define Architectural visualization not only as a communicative tool, in this case, to connect Culture and Architecture, but also, by the pursuit of beauty in its expressions, to define it as an Art.

The idea for this project was born from the desire to travel and discover the world, at a time in our lives when society needed us to be at home. And so, I ventured into this virtual journey where I proposed myself that from my computer, some internet connection and the architectural visualization (Archviz) tools I had at hand, it was possible to immerse, soak and recreate, in essence, different architecture styles and cultures around the world.

Then, after a long period of research and investigation, of traveling virtually through the bowels of the culture and architecture of countless countries, I decided to choose five architectural pieces from different parts of the world, and make each of them a dedicated chapter, where four images digitally produced by me managed to evoke in the viewer the culture and essence of the country where they are located.

This project does not pretend to recreate with rigorous fidelity each of the pieces and places chosen. This project intends to capture the essence of the country, the people, the place, and the culture, and transfer it to the viewer in the form of static images created digitally through Archviz, elevating the architecture, and always looking for beauty and harmony in each of the compositions, colors and light chosen for each chapter of this collection.

I – Lotus Temple, India

The Lotus Temple, located in New Delhi, India, is a Baháʼí House of Worship that was built in December 1986. The Lotus Temple is open to all, regardless of religion or any other factor. The building is composed of 27 free-standing marble-clad petals arranged in clusters of three to form nine sides, with nine doors opening onto a central hall with a height of 34 metres and a capacity of 2500 people. The Lotus Temple has won numerous architectural awards and has been featured in many newspaper and magazine articles. A 2001 CNN report referred to it as the most visited building in the world.

To capture the essence of India, I wanted to highlight colours by creating a contrast between the pure architecture, a vibrant blue sunny sky, and the impressive variety of colour seen in the clothes of Indian people.