Entrance with a Glass Front Door Ideas and Designs
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IBB Design Fine Furnishings
Dan Piassick
Inspiration for a traditional hallway in Dallas with beige walls, dark hardwood flooring, a glass front door and brown floors.
Inspiration for a traditional hallway in Dallas with beige walls, dark hardwood flooring, a glass front door and brown floors.
Inspired Interiors
Design ideas for a classic foyer in Omaha with porcelain flooring, a double front door, a glass front door, grey walls and grey floors.
ID.ology Interiors & Design
Medium sized country boot room in Other with grey walls, brick flooring, a single front door and a glass front door.
NDG Architecture
The Entry is the Mountain Modern connection.
This is an example of a rustic hallway in Denver with dark hardwood flooring, a double front door and a glass front door.
This is an example of a rustic hallway in Denver with dark hardwood flooring, a double front door and a glass front door.
Elan Studio
Inspiration for a large classic hallway in New Orleans with blue walls, medium hardwood flooring, a double front door and a glass front door.
Carpet One Floor & Home Design Center
Medium sized rustic hallway in San Francisco with beige walls, terracotta flooring, a double front door, a glass front door and brown floors.
Randy Trainor
This three-story vacation home for a family of ski enthusiasts features 5 bedrooms and a six-bed bunk room, 5 1/2 bathrooms, kitchen, dining room, great room, 2 wet bars, great room, exercise room, basement game room, office, mud room, ski work room, decks, stone patio with sunken hot tub, garage, and elevator.
The home sits into an extremely steep, half-acre lot that shares a property line with a ski resort and allows for ski-in, ski-out access to the mountain’s 61 trails. This unique location and challenging terrain informed the home’s siting, footprint, program, design, interior design, finishes, and custom made furniture.
Credit: Samyn-D'Elia Architects
Project designed by Franconia interior designer Randy Trainor. She also serves the New Hampshire Ski Country, Lake Regions and Coast, including Lincoln, North Conway, and Bartlett.
For more about Randy Trainor, click here: https://crtinteriors.com/
To learn more about this project, click here: https://crtinteriors.com/ski-country-chic/
Marvin
The owner’s goal was to create a lifetime family home using salvaged materials from an antique farmhouse and barn that had stood on another portion of the site. The timber roof structure, as well as interior wood cladding, and interior doors were salvaged from that house, while sustainable new materials (Maine cedar, hemlock timber and steel) and salvaged cabinetry and fixtures from a mid-century-modern teardown were interwoven to create a modern house with a strong connection to the past. Integrity® Wood-Ultrex® windows and doors were a perfect fit for this project. Integrity provided the only combination of a durable, thermally efficient exterior frame combined with a true wood interior.
Matt Fajkus Architecture
The Control/Shift House is perched on the high side of the site which takes advantage of the view to the southeast. A gradual descending path navigates the change in terrain from the street to the entry of the house. A series of low retaining walls/planter beds gather and release the earth upon the descent resulting in a fairly flat level for the house to sit on the top one third of the site. The entry axis is aligned with the celebrated stair volume and then re-centers on the actual entry axis once you approach the forecourt of the house.
The initial desire was for an “H” scheme house with common entertaining spaces bridging the gap between the more private spaces. After an investigation considering the site, program, and view, a key move was made: unfold the east wing of the “H” scheme to open all rooms to the southeast view resulting in a “T” scheme. The new derivation allows for both a swim pool which is on axis with the entry and main gathering space and a lap pool which occurs on the cross axis extending along the lengthy edge of the master suite, providing direct access for morning exercise and a view of the water throughout the day.
The Control/Shift House was derived from a clever way of following the “rules.” Strict HOA guidelines required very specific exterior massing restrictions which limits the lengths of unbroken elevations and promotes varying sizes of masses. The solution most often used in this neighborhood is one of addition - an aggregation of masses and program randomly attached to the inner core of the house which often results in a parasitic plan. The approach taken with the Control/Shift House was to push and pull program/massing to delineate and define the layout of the house. Massing is intentional and reiterated by the careful selection of materiality that tracks through the house. Voids and relief in the plan are a natural result of this method and allow for light and air to circulate throughout every space of the house, even into the most inner core.
Photography: Charles Davis Smith
Drewett Works
Believe it or not, this award-winning home began as a speculative project. Typically speculative projects involve a rather generic design that would appeal to many in a style that might be loved by the masses. But the project’s developer loved modern architecture and his personal residence was the first project designed by architect C.P. Drewett when Drewett Works launched in 2001. Together, the architect and developer envisioned a fictitious art collector who would one day purchase this stunning piece of desert modern architecture to showcase their magnificent collection.
The primary views from the site were southwest. Therefore, protecting the interior spaces from the southwest sun while making the primary views available was the greatest challenge. The views were very calculated and carefully managed. Every room needed to not only capture the vistas of the surrounding desert, but also provide viewing spaces for the potential collection to be housed within its walls.
The core of the material palette is utilitarian including exposed masonry and locally quarried cantera stone. An organic nature was added to the project through millwork selections including walnut and red gum veneers.
The eventual owners saw immediately that this could indeed become a home for them as well as their magnificent collection, of which pieces are loaned out to museums around the world. Their decision to purchase the home was based on the dimensions of one particular wall in the dining room which was EXACTLY large enough for one particular painting not yet displayed due to its size. The owners and this home were, as the saying goes, a perfect match!
Project Details | Desert Modern for the Magnificent Collection, Estancia, Scottsdale, AZ
Architecture: C.P. Drewett, Jr., AIA, NCARB | Drewett Works, Scottsdale, AZ
Builder: Shannon Construction | Phoenix, AZ
Interior Selections: Janet Bilotti, NCIDQ, ASID | Naples, FL
Custom Millwork: Linear Fine Woodworking | Scottsdale, AZ
Photography: Dino Tonn | Scottsdale, AZ
Awards: 2014 Gold Nugget Award of Merit
Feature Article: Luxe. Interiors and Design. Winter 2015, “Lofty Exposure”
Jaffa Group Design Build
Design ideas for a contemporary boot room in Salt Lake City with white walls, a single front door and a glass front door.
Graham Design Build
Photo of a medium sized traditional front door in Louisville with a single front door and a glass front door.
Legno Bastone Wide Plank Flooring
Photo of a large contemporary front door in Miami with white walls, medium hardwood flooring, a single front door and a glass front door.
Michael Fullen Design Group
Karyn Millet
Photo of a contemporary front door in Orange County with beige walls, a pivot front door and a glass front door.
Photo of a contemporary front door in Orange County with beige walls, a pivot front door and a glass front door.
Archer & Buchanan Architecture, Ltd.
Angle Eye Photography
Design ideas for a large classic hallway in Philadelphia with brown walls, a single front door, a glass front door and multi-coloured floors.
Design ideas for a large classic hallway in Philadelphia with brown walls, a single front door, a glass front door and multi-coloured floors.
Hajian Architects Inc
Emma Sampson
Photo of a contemporary foyer in Portland Maine with white walls, light hardwood flooring, a single front door and a glass front door.
Photo of a contemporary foyer in Portland Maine with white walls, light hardwood flooring, a single front door and a glass front door.
SHM Architects
Photography: Nathan Schroder
Mediterranean entrance in Dallas with a double front door, a glass front door and beige floors.
Mediterranean entrance in Dallas with a double front door, a glass front door and beige floors.
Allegretti Architects, Inc.
James Yochum
This is an example of a traditional entrance in Other with beige walls, medium hardwood flooring, a single front door and a glass front door.
This is an example of a traditional entrance in Other with beige walls, medium hardwood flooring, a single front door and a glass front door.
VanderHorn Architects
The center projecting bay of the main block features an entry portico with Ionic columns supporting a broken pedimented roof, all of limestone. French doors with transoms afford a view to Long Island Sound beyond. Above, a tall window with limestone surround is nestled under the flared eaves of the hipped slate roofed gable that completes the composition.
Woodruff Brown Photography
About Space Studios
Photo Credit: Nicole Leone
Design ideas for a mediterranean front door in Los Angeles with a single front door, a glass front door and beige walls.
Design ideas for a mediterranean front door in Los Angeles with a single front door, a glass front door and beige walls.
Entrance with a Glass Front Door Ideas and Designs
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