
The Interiors In Netflix's 'Dept. Q' Have Main Character Energy: Why They're More Significant Than You Might Think
At first glance the interiors are dark, cold and gritty – see: the basement urinals where Detective Carl Morck (played by Matthew Goode) and his micro-team have to set up office. But look closer, and the interiors are stylised, atmospheric and we'd quite like to recreate some of them at home. Plus, they have their own main character energy and play a big part in creating the edginess of the drama.
And while the Netflix show is based on a series of crime books by Danish author Jussi Adler-Olsen set in Copenhagen, Dept. Q has moved its setting to the Scottish city Edinburgh, with the show's creator Scott Frank describing it as 'the perfect combination between the modern and the medieval'. These are our top interiors moments in Dept. Q and why they matter.
In the opening episode of the series, we go to into Carl's boss, Moira Jacobson's office at the Edinburgh Police HQ. While the force may be in need of a cash injection, we couldn't stop staring at the carpet! With a fitting tartan nod, the green-and-red square pattern has a 70's-style template that complements the vertical wood paneling and mid-century furniture.
Not to mention the bare concrete pillars and floor-to-ceiling Crittal windows. While you know the carpet gives off stale 'grandparent house' cigarette smoke, it's also giving us good Mad Men vibes.
It doesn't look like much when Carl is shown down to his new office quarters for Dept. Q – it is after all the police HQ's old toilet/shower/changing room/gym. But it's the basement space, named 'Q', that gives the department, and the show, its name.
'Where's this office?' asks Carl. 'Q?' he replies as Jacobson hands him the labelled keys. 'Where's that?' he asks. 'Downstairs,' she replies. 'But the offices are numbered downstairs, Moira,' retorts Carl. 'I meant downstairs downstairs,' she replies.
And it's amazing what some lighting can do to the space, which starts off piled full of discarded chairs and old case note boxes. Especially for the Claridge's green and bottle brown rectangular wall tiles which perfectly offset the geometric floor and ceiling pendant lights.
In a later episode, when DC Rose Dickson (played by Leah Byrne) joins the department, it gets positively atmospheric and you could easily forget about the urinals and the discarded gym weights, that Carl can't lift, around the corner.
We're particularly into Merritt's house by the sea, although if we were receiving mysterious death threats, we really wouldn't want to be living in a building with so much glass. Filmed in Dirleton in East Lothian, the actual house was an old World War II radar station which had been renovated and then sold. Dept.Q's supervising location manager Hugh Gourlay has said: 'We ended up painting it to give it a more austere flavour. It has that feeling of Merritt's coldness.'
There's coolness to the interiors too with the stainless steel kitchen, the bare concrete floors and white-washed walls. Again, the lighting, in the form of up-lit wall fittings and large arc floor lamps, creates the eerie atmosphere that gives that bad-person-lurking-outside feel, as does the open plan design. Draw the curtains Merritt!
The care home that Merritt's brother William ends up in, and that Carl and his anorak-wearing, far more charismatic sidekick Akram Salim (played by Alexej Manvelov) visit in episode two, is set outside of Edinburgh in Midlothian. It was shot at Vogrie House, Pathhead, an old mansion that was made to 'look like a clinic, institutional but richer than it is,' according to location manager Gourlay.
Indeed it looks more like an ambassador's residence than a care home with mahogany furnishings, plush velvet armchairs and a sweeping grand staircase. The luxe mansion feel begs the question: what part does the suspiciously glamorous Dr Fiona Wallace (played by Michelle Duncan), now in charge of William's care, have in all of this? And also, who is paying for him to be there?
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