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How did brothers convert a candy factory loft?

Turning a candy factory loft into something livable

Two brothers transformed a cavernous candy factory loft into a sweet new home—and the process started with recognizing that “big and open” can also mean difficult to live with.

One of the core problems was spatial layout: the open plan that made the loft feel expansive also created practical issues. In particular, the original bathroom configuration left no door, meaning privacy and separation from the rest of the home were lacking.

The renovation focused on solving those everyday constraints while keeping the loft’s scale and character. The story frames the starting point as love for the space’s openness, but a clear need to make it functional—adding or redefining elements that improve circulation, privacy, and usability without turning the loft into something small.

Why this matters for anyone renovating: many industrial or converted spaces are marketed for their volume, but the same openness can fail real-life tests—especially around personal spaces like bathrooms.

The brothers’ approach illustrates a common renovation trade-off: preserving what makes a space feel special (high ceilings, large volumes, light) while reintroducing the boundaries that modern life needs (doors, zones, and more traditional private areas).

If you’re looking for a takeaway, it’s that livability often comes down to small, targeted changes—like reworking bathroom access—rather than abandoning the loft style altogether. In this case, they found a way to keep the loft’s strengths while making it feel like a home you can actually live in.


Curated by Humans | Summarized by Machines