Yes white goes with everything, but it isn't nearly as calming for me as they seem to think it should be. I find this much white to be cold, hard, boring, and all looking alike. It can also be blinding in bright sunlight.
In some rooms here there's some neutral things like wood, but too often everything is white: walls, rugs, furniture, curtains and other fabrics. Even much of the artworks and decorative objects are white. Sometimes even the wood is deliberately toned down, grayed out if not painted white.
There's so much emphasis on natural light that they seem to forget that part of all days there isn't any outside light at all. Many rooms, at least what shows in the pictures, seem to have a limited amount of lighting for those dark times. Does everybody go to bed at sunset?
There's a love for low seating, supposedly comfortable. This forgets about people who may have trouble getting up from low chairs or sofas: the elderly, those with hip or knee problems, the uncoordinated, those who are actually disabled. Do they discourage those people from visiting? What happens when the people who live there fall into one of those categories?
There's also a fondness for long benches next to long dining tables. This would be awkward. Does everybody sit down and get up at the same time? Does everybody have the exact same preference for distance from the table? Doesn't anybody want a back to their seat?
Having white linen upholstery looks okay at first, but at least one specifically mentions having throws available to protect the white linen, and there was no mention of pets or children. This is not a house to be lived in; it's a showpiece.
I could not possibly live in any of these houses, and if I happened to visit, I would find myself wearing red or purple or bright blue just to remind myself that there is color in the world.