Recommend speakers for a large living room


Hi, I am moving to a new apartment with a large living room (38" x 23", plus a dining area & kitchen). I am planning to have 2 different sitting areas given the size. Here is a picture of the floor-plan: https://ibb.co/J5szvj9

Everything is wood floors except on the blue squares where I plan to put carpet. I’ve been thinking of using omni-directional speakers (German Physiks Borderland) given the area is large and there are multiple listening locations. But I’d like to get some recommendations & also some ideas of where it would be best to place the speakers - so far my idea is to put them on the red circles.

My budget for speakers is ~$50,000.

dpal
A couple of negative wisecrack responses that started the answers. That attitude is not helpful imo.

I would suggest auditioning Magicos. The S7 perhaps. I can vouch for the S3 sounding absolutely amazing and being able to fill a very large room with huge dynamic sound. I’ve not heard the S7, but they have to be the same incredible performance just bigger sound and more bass?
If it is not a secret, where do they make one-bedroom apartments with such a large living room? It is quite impressive. Some remodeled loft?
You have an interesting challenge ahead of you. That’s a larger room but that’s not the main challenge. The dinning area and living room area should have good sound quality if you place the speakers in the areas marked by the red circles. The sitting area to the side of the speakers will likely have several compromises. Maybe some sort of speaker trickery will help but I don’t know. How is the seating arranged in the sitting area? Any room treatment in the plans? Bass will not be an issue. Having enough output will be important. I suggest considering high sensitivity speakers with decent power handling capacity for high SPLs. Not so you can play loud but so dynamic peaks are reproduced. Many good speakers suffer from dynamic compression in the mid frequencies. They will get lost in a large room. I also suggest considering a line source design either OB or closed cabinet. Line source speakers attenuate less per distance than point source speakers do so more SPL will be available in your kitchen. They also have minimal floor and ceiling interaction. I suggest looking into DSP with room correction as well. Room correction will help integrate your new speakers with the room. I haven’t tried this but it’s possible to optimize for two locations and switch from one to the other depending on where you are. The space in front of the speakers should be fine. The room correction might work better than expected for the side space.
I also vote jbl everest . 
My room is 56x36x15 . I dont use anything but jbl . Currently my set up is wide dispersion tweeters and horns 2405 and 2441 w 2310 lenses . 2235 15” woofers and two 2245 18” subs. Horns and tweets powered by 100w rogue tube amp , woofs powered by 150w mcintosh , and subs powered by 600w x 2 mcintosh . 
More than enough oomph to fill the room . With the ability for sweet dinner time listening and intricate detail even at the lowest volumes . And all out mayhem at the higher registers.

 This entire system is half the cost of the budget you claim to have for speakers . By the time you have worthy amps and preamp youll be at 100k. Difference is i have a setup i can tweek infinitely .
 A 100k setup is what it is . You will have to like it even if it bothers you like a drip on the forehead. Chances are though a mcintosh c52 pre with a couple mcintosh mc1.25k amps and a pair of jbl dd67000 everest will sound pretty freakin awesome. And look drop dead gorgeous to boot . 
If it helps with your planning, bear in mind that speaker setup (positioning) has as much influence on the sound as all of the hardware, if not more.

At the very least make sure the speaker manufacturer will visit your room and place the speakers to work optimally with your room. 

I design and install loudspeakers for Aluminous Audio so I can speak to the critical nature of speaker placement.