Search results for "Den hidden bar" in Home Design Ideas
Searle & Taylor
Design inspiration:
The kitchen was to be designed as an open plan lifestyle space that also included a full workstation that could be concealed when not in use.
What Searle & Taylor created:
The kitchen was part of an extension to a detached house that was built during the 1990’s. The extension was designed as an open plan lifestyle space that incorporated a kitchen and separate dining area, a ‘snug’ seating area and importantly, a workstation that could be hidden from view when socialising and entertaining.
Floor to ceiling cabinets were designed against the back wall with a large linear island in front. To soften the look of the room, the corner units were curved at equal angles on either side and includes a tall walk-in larder with internal shelving at separate heights. Also integrated is an extra wide 90cm Liebherr fridge freezer with ice maker and a bank of built-in cooking appliances, as specified by the client.
The large central island with granite worksurface houses nine drawers with shell handles and is designed with a dual purpose: for food preparation and cooking on one side and for relaxed seating with a cantilevered solid oak breakfast bar on the other. The cooking area houses a centrally positioned full surface induction hob, which is directly beneath a flush mounted ceiling hood.
As requested, to the right hand side of the cabinets, a work station was created that could accommodate files, folders and a large screen PC. In order to be as functional as possible, a set of pocket doors were developed on a bi-fold system that return into side pockets to leave the workstation clear and open. Complementing the rest of the cabinetry, the doors feature carved semi-circles within clean lines together with semi-circular handles that reveal a mandala-inspired design when closed.
KUBE architecture
When man's aspiration is the sky, the ground is only a resistance. - Sverre Fehn In this renovation, a conventional masonry row house is opened up to the sky, with a light, airy interior. The original floor plan was completely transformed for more efficient function and a greater sense of spatial connection, both vertically and horizontally. From a grounded lower level, with concrete, cork, and warm finishes, an abstract composition of crisp forms emerges. The kitchen sits at the center of the house as a hearth, establishing the line between dark and light, illustrated through wenge base cabinets with light anigre above. Service spaces such as bathrooms and closets are hidden within the thickness of walls, contributing to the overall simplicity of the design. A new central staircase serves as the backbone of the composition, bordered by a cable wall tensioned top and bottom, connecting the solid base of the house with the light steel structure above. A glass roof hovers overhead, as gravity recedes and walls seem to rise up and float. The overall effect is clean and minimal, transforming vertically from dark to light, warm to cool, grounded to weightless, and culminating in a space composed of line and plane, shadows and light.
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This kitchen transformation allowed for more storage space and opened up the kitchen work areas.
We removed the kitchen table and incorporated a round peninsula eating area. Doing this allowed for additional storage on the back wall. We removed fireplace and inserted a double oven and built in refrigerator on the back wall opposite the sink. We added panel details on the side walls to match the existing paneling throughout the home. We updated the kitchen by changing the tile flooring to hardwood to match the adjoining rooms. The new bay window allows for cozy window seating.
We opened up the front entryway to open up the sight-line through the kitchen and into the back yard. The seldom used front entry closet was changed into a “hidden bar” with backlit honey onyx countertop when doors are opened. The antiqued mirrored glass is reflected from the back of the bar and is also in the paneled doors.
Builder Credit: Plekkenpol Builders
Photo Credit: Mark Ehlen of Ehlen Creative Communications, LLC
Heartland Design and Remodeling
This NVS Remodeling & Design project is a basement remodel in South Riding, Virginia. The homeowner and NVS designer were able to dream up a warm, inviting basement plan that lends itself to cozy movie nights as well as large parties (the homeowners love to entertain!). The NVS production team carried out the design to perfection (our carpenter even custom-made rounded shelves to house the liquor). When you are in the space, it does not even feel like a basement.
Domiteaux Garza Architecture
Photographer: Charles Smith Photography
Inspiration for a contemporary living room in Dallas with limestone flooring.
Inspiration for a contemporary living room in Dallas with limestone flooring.
Giulietti Schouten Weber Architects
Kitchen/Dining/Sitting Room of this Mid 60's ranch remodel shows the new quater sawn oak cabinets and the walnut slab table. Cabinets were constructed by Cascade Contracting and the table was fabricated by Altura Furniture.
Photos By: Josh Parteee
Pro Basement Inc.
Basement bar with granite top Java Mocha cabinets
Lily Otte
Large classic home bar in St Louis with granite worktops, multi-coloured splashback, stone tiled splashback, ceramic flooring and beige floors.
Large classic home bar in St Louis with granite worktops, multi-coloured splashback, stone tiled splashback, ceramic flooring and beige floors.
Brush and Hammer Builders
Design ideas for a small rural single-wall home bar in Portland Maine with no sink, shaker cabinets, white cabinets, white splashback, metro tiled splashback, light hardwood flooring, beige floors and grey worktops.
R|House Design Build
This is an example of a large traditional kitchen/diner in Minneapolis with beaded cabinets, white cabinets, wood worktops, white splashback, an island, a belfast sink, porcelain splashback, stainless steel appliances and medium hardwood flooring.
Design ideas for a rustic home bar in Phoenix with dark wood cabinets, metro tiled splashback and dark hardwood flooring.
North Fork Builders of Montana, Inc.
Large rustic galley wet bar in Other with zinc worktops, medium hardwood flooring, brown floors, medium wood cabinets, black worktops and a feature wall.
Newgard Custom Homes
Design ideas for a traditional galley breakfast bar in Chicago with dark hardwood flooring, recessed-panel cabinets, dark wood cabinets, brown splashback and brown floors.
Kenneth Brown Design
The grey and black striped area rug and black leather ottoman provide the foundation for this sophisticated den. By Kenneth Brown Design.
Inspiration for a traditional games room in New Orleans with grey walls.
Inspiration for a traditional games room in New Orleans with grey walls.
Spaces Interiors/Exteriors
Basement Bar Area
Inspiration for a classic kitchen in Omaha with ceramic flooring.
Inspiration for a classic kitchen in Omaha with ceramic flooring.
Griffin Design
Designed By: Robby & Lisa Griffin
Photios By: Desired Photo
This is an example of a small contemporary home bar in Houston with light hardwood flooring and brown floors.
This is an example of a small contemporary home bar in Houston with light hardwood flooring and brown floors.
Search results for Den Hidden Bar in Home Photos
Francesco Pierazzi Architects
This detached Victorian house was extended to accommodate the needs of a young family with three small children.
The programme was organized into two distinctive structures: the larger and higher volume is placed at the back of the house to face the garden and make the best use of the south orientation and to accommodate a large Family Room open to the new Kitchen. A longer and thinner volume, only 1.15m wide, stands to the western side of the house and accommodates a Toilet, a Utility and a dining booth facing the Family Room. All the functions that are housed in the secondary volume have direct access either from the original house or the rear extension, thus generating a hierarchy of served and servant volumes, a relationship that is homogeneous to that between the house and the extension.
The timber structures, while distinctive in their proportions, are connected by a shallow volume that doubles as a bench to create an architectural continuum and to emphasize the effect of a secondary volume wrapped around a primary one.
While the extension makes use of a modern idiom, so that it is clearly distinguished from the original house and so that the history of its development becomes immediately apparent, the size of the red cedar cladding boards, left untreated to allow a natural silvering process, matches that of the Victorian brickwork to bind house and extension together.
As the budget did not make possible the use a bespoke profile, an off-the-shelf board was selected and further grooved at mid point to recreate the brick pattern of the façade.
A tall and slender pivoting door, positioned at the boundary between the original house and the new intervention, allows a direct view of the garden from the front of the house and facilitates an innovative relationship with the outside.
Photo: Gianluca Maver
Deborah Leamann
This bar is part of the Family room. It has custom glass shelves, custom-designed, and fabricated stone counter. There are 2 Subzero fridges to keep beverages cold. It is wonderful to have an entertaining area.
Distinguished Kitchens & Bath
Andrea Patassy
Inspiration for a small classic single-wall wet bar in Miami with a submerged sink, glass-front cabinets and dark wood cabinets.
Inspiration for a small classic single-wall wet bar in Miami with a submerged sink, glass-front cabinets and dark wood cabinets.
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