Display Home

The Capri 356 by BOLD Living - Luxury, Warmth, and One Incredible Floorplan

From its grand facade to its dream-worthy kitchen and beautifully zoned kids wing, this display shows what BOLD Living can truly deliver.
Kian Burke

+ Pros

- Mudroom/laundry combo that’s actually functional

- Incredible zoning between parents and kids

- Showstopping kitchen–living–dining proportions

- Kids wing with retreat + study nook + walk-ins in both minor bedrooms

- Cons

- Requires a 20m wide block, which limits buyer accessibility

Some display homes are slow burns. The Capri 356 isn’t one of them. From the moment you hit the portico—with its striking tiling and a facade that genuinely feels “grand” rather than just tall—you know you’re stepping into something special.

BOLD Living positions the Capri 356 as a premium family home for buyers working with a generous block. And honestly, the design thrives on the space. This is a home for families who value separation, privacy, and a sense of grown-up luxury without cutting the kids out of the picture.

On display, it’s clear the team has gone heavy on upgrades, but instead of feeling unattainable, it acts as a masterclass in what’s possible. Even before you properly settle in, the mood is warm, sophisticated, and unmistakably high-end.

Design & Floorplan

Entry & Flow

The entry sets the tone beautifully. Those warm, natural floors pull you inward, and the home office at the front feels like it genuinely belongs there—well sized, well placed, and far enough from the action to be productive.

Zoning

What makes the Capri 356 genuinely refreshing is the left-right zoning. Kids occupy their own wing on one side; parents get the opposite. This is only possible on a 20m block, but my god—it’s a luxury that makes a world of difference. After so many narrow-front homes with linear “front-to-back” caravanning layouts, this feels like stretching out after a long flight.

Kids Wing

The children’s side flows beautifully. There’s a proper retreat and a two-person study nook that feels spacious, not squeezed in as an afterthought. All bedrooms each get walk-in robes—huge tick for families with older kids.

The shared bathroom here is a standout. The walnut + stone + green tile combination is wildly good, and the shower is well sized. The powder room is perfectly sized too—functional without stealing space from the main zones. Sometimes these can take up more room than they need.

Bedroom 3 sitting at the far end of the wing gives it that “older teen” or “guest room” feel. A small detail, but a meaningful one.

Kitchen, Dining & Family

This is where the home becomes something else entirely. The proportions are dreamlike. Big, breezy, luxurious, and yet still liveable. The walnut cabinetry with stone benchtops brings real warmth, and it’s one of the few displays where I found myself not nitpicking anything.

The butler’s pantry gets an actual door—praise be—and the storage is better than plenty of full kitchens I’ve reviewed. Connected to this is a combined mudroom/laundry, which is such a smart two-in-one zone. There’s room for appliances, folding space, storage—the lot.

Master Suite

The master suite is lovely. You wake up to views of the backyard and alfresco instead of staring straight into an ensuite door. It gives the room a calm, resort-like feel. The walk-in robe is oversized and even manages to fit a dedicated makeup station.

The ensuite delivers on both size and function, with dual sinks and a great layout.

Outdoor Living

The alfresco echoes the portico’s large stone-beige-and-white checkerboard tiling, tying the whole house together visually. The space is large, bright, and made for entertaining, especially with the pool right beside it. And the pool isn’t a token splash pool—it’s a proper family-sized feature with matching tiling that elevates the whole outdoor zone.

Style & Finishes

This display oozes warmth and soul. Walnut tones, natural stone, warm flooring, and calm green notes create a palette that feels premium without sliding into pretentious.

Everything looks intentional. Everything feels cohesive. It’s the kind of styling that makes you want to redecorate your own home the moment you leave.

Yes, many finishes are upgrades. But the way they’re pulled together gives buyers real inspiration about what the Capri 356 can be.

Display Experience

Walking through this home feels genuinely luxurious—a rare combination of space, light, and material warmth that makes every zone feel inviting. The ceilings feel high, the acoustics are comfortable, and the flow is so naturally intuitive that I caught myself forgetting I was “reviewing” and not just exploring.

The layout performs even better in reality than on paper. All the right rooms feel big. All the circulation paths feel purposeful. Nothing feels wasted or cramped.

Verdict

The Capri 356 is one of the most emotionally compelling display homes I’ve walked through. It blends luxury with warmth, practicality with personality, and space with purpose. Even with its large block requirements and upgrade-heavy display, the core design is so thoughtful that it’s genuinely hard to fault.

If you’re building on a wide block and want a home that feels rich in both function and feeling, this one absolutely deserves a top spot on your shortlist.

Specifications

Starting from
$503,000
Minimalist line drawing of a double bed with headboard and single pillow.
4
bed
Outline of a bathtub with a showerhead and bubbles inside.
2
bath
Black and white line drawing of a vintage television with antenna and control knobs.
3
living
Icon of a garage with a closed door and a small window above it.
2
car
Capri 356
Facade
Kinma Valley
356
SQM
20
Metre Lot width
Ceiling Height