Projects | Japanese Tile Installations by Mittsu Japanese Tiles
Mittsu Japanese Tiles are specified in projects where surface quality, material depth and architectural restraint define the space.
These projects show how Japanese ceramic tiles perform in real applications across hospitality, retail and residential interiors.
Each project demonstrates how kiln-formed surfaces respond to light, variation and scale in a built environment.
Featured project
The Broadcaster, London
Architect: DesignLSM
Kaji Border is used across the bar and façade surfaces, creating rhythm, reflection and material continuity within a hospitality setting.
Hospitality
LUX Grand Baie, Mauritius
Interior Design: Kelly Hoppen
Yuki Border introduces quiet surface movement and soft shadow detail within a restrained resort interior.
Kasumigaseki, Dubai
Deep Oribe glaze creates a rich architectural wall surface within a hospitality setting at Vida Emirates Hills.
Retail
Bisque Golf, Amsterdam
Design: Barde + vanVoltt
Kaji Border wraps counters and platforms to create a continuous material language across the retail interior.
Mikel, Abu Dhabi
Kaji Border is used as a continuous surface across the kiosk, defining the space through proportion and reflection.
Residential
Hamilton Park, London
Kaji Border is used across curved kitchen forms, turning ceramic tile into an architectural surface.
Haarlem House of Four, Amsterdam
Design: Barde + vanVoltt
A calm residential bathroom where Kaji Border creates texture, depth and controlled tonal variation.
Parisian Kitchen
Yuki Border introduces shadow, reflection and subtle movement within a restrained kitchen composition.
Grain Silo Conversion
Kaji Border Oat combines with warm timber interiors to create a quiet and tactile rural retreat.
Concept and material studies
Home Spa Concept
A conceptual spa interior exploring atmosphere, light and material continuity through Japanese porcelain tile.
Ka-Bu with Yakisugi
Ka-Bu matt white tiles are set against yakisugi timber to create a precise, restrained material contrast.
Projects are supplied across the UK, Europe and the UAE, with tiles sourced directly from Japan or from local stock depending on specification.
Japanese tiles are not applied as decoration. They are used as architectural surfaces, shaping space through proportion, texture and light.