Home Office with Grey Walls and Blue Floors Ideas and Designs
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Chapman Design Group, Inc.
Mark Hoyle - Townville, SC
This is an example of a medium sized bohemian home office in Other with a reading nook, grey walls, carpet, a freestanding desk and blue floors.
This is an example of a medium sized bohemian home office in Other with a reading nook, grey walls, carpet, a freestanding desk and blue floors.
Feldman Architecture, Inc.
Paul Dyer
Design ideas for a contemporary home office in San Francisco with grey walls, concrete flooring and blue floors.
Design ideas for a contemporary home office in San Francisco with grey walls, concrete flooring and blue floors.
Mel McDaniel Design
Design ideas for a medium sized classic home office in Philadelphia with grey walls, carpet, no fireplace, a freestanding desk and blue floors.
LMB Interiors
Large traditional study in San Francisco with grey walls, carpet, a freestanding desk and blue floors.
John Kraemer & Sons
Builder: John Kraemer & Sons | Architect: Murphy & Co . Design | Interiors: Twist Interior Design | Landscaping: TOPO | Photographer: Corey Gaffer
This is an example of a medium sized traditional home office in Minneapolis with carpet, no fireplace, a freestanding desk, blue floors, a reading nook and grey walls.
This is an example of a medium sized traditional home office in Minneapolis with carpet, no fireplace, a freestanding desk, blue floors, a reading nook and grey walls.
Paper Moon Painting
The design team at Bel Atelier selected lovely, sophisticated colors throughout the spaces in this elegant Alamo Heights home.
Home office painted in Benjamin Moore's 2127-40 Wolf Gray
PACS Architecture
Inspiration for a medium sized classic study in New York with grey walls, carpet, no fireplace, a built-in desk and blue floors.
Katie Hutchison Studio
The new owners of this house in Harvard, Massachusetts loved its location and authentic Shaker characteristics, but weren’t fans of its curious layout. A dated first-floor full bathroom could only be accessed by going up a few steps to a landing, opening the bathroom door and then going down the same number of steps to enter the room. The dark kitchen faced the driveway to the north, rather than the bucolic backyard fields to the south. The dining space felt more like an enlarged hall and could only comfortably seat four. Upstairs, a den/office had a woefully low ceiling; the master bedroom had limited storage, and a sad full bathroom featured a cramped shower.
KHS proposed a number of changes to create an updated home where the owners could enjoy cooking, entertaining, and being connected to the outdoors from the first-floor living spaces, while also experiencing more inviting and more functional private spaces upstairs.
On the first floor, the primary change was to capture space that had been part of an upper-level screen porch and convert it to interior space. To make the interior expansion seamless, we raised the floor of the area that had been the upper-level porch, so it aligns with the main living level, and made sure there would be no soffits in the planes of the walls we removed. We also raised the floor of the remaining lower-level porch to reduce the number of steps required to circulate from it to the newly expanded interior. New patio door systems now fill the arched openings that used to be infilled with screen. The exterior interventions (which also included some new casement windows in the dining area) were designed to be subtle, while affording significant improvements on the interior. Additionally, the first-floor bathroom was reconfigured, shifting one of its walls to widen the dining space, and moving the entrance to the bathroom from the stair landing to the kitchen instead.
These changes (which involved significant structural interventions) resulted in a much more open space to accommodate a new kitchen with a view of the lush backyard and a new dining space defined by a new built-in banquette that comfortably seats six, and -- with the addition of a table extension -- up to eight people.
Upstairs in the den/office, replacing the low, board ceiling with a raised, plaster, tray ceiling that springs from above the original board-finish walls – newly painted a light color -- created a much more inviting, bright, and expansive space. Re-configuring the master bath to accommodate a larger shower and adding built-in storage cabinets in the master bedroom improved comfort and function. A new whole-house color palette rounds out the improvements.
Photos by Katie Hutchison
Zehnder Homes
Handsome home office with custom built in cabinetry
Medium sized traditional study in Minneapolis with grey walls, carpet, no fireplace, blue floors and a freestanding desk.
Medium sized traditional study in Minneapolis with grey walls, carpet, no fireplace, blue floors and a freestanding desk.
Sloan Polish Design
Hollywood regency style home office in with black, gold, pale pink, dusty blues and emerald green velvet. Pale blue / gray wide stripes painted on the walls.
User
Matthew Niemann Photography
Medium sized classic home office in Other with no fireplace, a freestanding desk, grey walls, dark hardwood flooring and blue floors.
Medium sized classic home office in Other with no fireplace, a freestanding desk, grey walls, dark hardwood flooring and blue floors.
Karla Trincanello, CID, Interior Decisions, Inc.
Home office to be proud of. This room was deemed the living on the architectural plans but this client would never use it for sitting so we decided to make the room useful as a home office especially during the COVID disaster. The desk and credenza were custom designed in two finishes to show off the angled shape and provide a large desk area to spread out on. The two guest chairs are open framed allowing visual view of the dramatic office from the entry foyer. The walls are padded and upholstered to contain the acoustics within the spectacular room and the art is the perfect focal point as one sees the room from the foyer along with the interesting Orb light fixture. Working from home is not only comfortable and functional, it is beautiful.
Denise Quade Design
Dark stained maple cabients were built in on this long wall to add hidden storage. Stained floating shelves above add display space for special pieces. The patterned carpet adds visual interest while staying cozy. Wall to wall carpet in a home office.
Dill Cabinetry
Custom Cherry and Tiger Maple credenza combining Art Deco and Transitional design elements.
This is an example of a medium sized traditional study in Baltimore with grey walls, carpet, a built-in desk and blue floors.
This is an example of a medium sized traditional study in Baltimore with grey walls, carpet, a built-in desk and blue floors.
The Kingston Group - Remodeling Specialists
Large study in Nashville with grey walls, dark hardwood flooring, a freestanding desk and blue floors.
My Eco Space Group Ltd
Contemporary garden office with toilet facility
Design ideas for a medium sized contemporary home studio in Other with grey walls, carpet, a built-in desk and blue floors.
Design ideas for a medium sized contemporary home studio in Other with grey walls, carpet, a built-in desk and blue floors.
Out Of The Box Interiors
Design ideas for a small classic study in Melbourne with grey walls, carpet, no fireplace, a freestanding desk and blue floors.
Katie Hutchison Studio
The new owners of this house in Harvard, Massachusetts loved its location and authentic Shaker characteristics, but weren’t fans of its curious layout. A dated first-floor full bathroom could only be accessed by going up a few steps to a landing, opening the bathroom door and then going down the same number of steps to enter the room. The dark kitchen faced the driveway to the north, rather than the bucolic backyard fields to the south. The dining space felt more like an enlarged hall and could only comfortably seat four. Upstairs, a den/office had a woefully low ceiling; the master bedroom had limited storage, and a sad full bathroom featured a cramped shower.
KHS proposed a number of changes to create an updated home where the owners could enjoy cooking, entertaining, and being connected to the outdoors from the first-floor living spaces, while also experiencing more inviting and more functional private spaces upstairs.
On the first floor, the primary change was to capture space that had been part of an upper-level screen porch and convert it to interior space. To make the interior expansion seamless, we raised the floor of the area that had been the upper-level porch, so it aligns with the main living level, and made sure there would be no soffits in the planes of the walls we removed. We also raised the floor of the remaining lower-level porch to reduce the number of steps required to circulate from it to the newly expanded interior. New patio door systems now fill the arched openings that used to be infilled with screen. The exterior interventions (which also included some new casement windows in the dining area) were designed to be subtle, while affording significant improvements on the interior. Additionally, the first-floor bathroom was reconfigured, shifting one of its walls to widen the dining space, and moving the entrance to the bathroom from the stair landing to the kitchen instead.
These changes (which involved significant structural interventions) resulted in a much more open space to accommodate a new kitchen with a view of the lush backyard and a new dining space defined by a new built-in banquette that comfortably seats six, and -- with the addition of a table extension -- up to eight people.
Upstairs in the den/office, replacing the low, board ceiling with a raised, plaster, tray ceiling that springs from above the original board-finish walls – newly painted a light color -- created a much more inviting, bright, and expansive space. Re-configuring the master bath to accommodate a larger shower and adding built-in storage cabinets in the master bedroom improved comfort and function. A new whole-house color palette rounds out the improvements.
Photos by Katie Hutchison
Signature Design Interiors
This is an example of a medium sized classic study in DC Metro with grey walls, carpet, a standard fireplace, a stone fireplace surround, a freestanding desk and blue floors.
Anna von Mangoldt Farben
Georgia ist eine sehr beliebte Farbe in Anna von Mangoldts Kollektion, da sie aufgrund ihrer komplexen Mischung sehr vielseitig verwendbar ist und nie düster oder traurig wirkt. Ob als Boden-, Möbel- oder in gut beleuchteten Räumen als Wandfarbe, Georgia wirkt immer lebendig, ohne aufdringlich zu sein.
Home Office with Grey Walls and Blue Floors Ideas and Designs
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