Search results for "Lean to extension" in Home Design Ideas
Regan Baker Design Inc.
Stylish brewery owners with airline miles that match George Clooney’s decided to hire Regan Baker Design to transform their beloved Duboce Park second home into an organic modern oasis reflecting their modern aesthetic and sustainable, green conscience lifestyle. From hops to floors, we worked extensively with our design savvy clients to provide a new footprint for their kitchen, dining and living room area, redesigned three bathrooms, reconfigured and designed the master suite, and replaced an existing spiral staircase with a new modern, steel staircase. We collaborated with an architect to expedite the permit process, as well as hired a structural engineer to help with the new loads from removing the stairs and load bearing walls in the kitchen and Master bedroom. We also used LED light fixtures, FSC certified cabinetry and low VOC paint finishes.
Regan Baker Design was responsible for the overall schematics, design development, construction documentation, construction administration, as well as the selection and procurement of all fixtures, cabinets, equipment, furniture,and accessories.
Key Contributors: Green Home Construction; Photography: Sarah Hebenstreit / Modern Kids Co.
In this photo:
We added a pop of color on the built-in bookshelf, and used CB2 space saving wall-racks for bikes as decor.
Northwick Design
Design ideas for a contemporary home office in London with white walls, medium hardwood flooring and a freestanding desk.
Brett Mickan Interior Design
Thomas Dalhoff
Photo of a large contemporary grey and cream open plan kitchen in Sydney with flat-panel cabinets, grey cabinets, marble worktops, white splashback, ceramic splashback, stainless steel appliances, an island and dark hardwood flooring.
Photo of a large contemporary grey and cream open plan kitchen in Sydney with flat-panel cabinets, grey cabinets, marble worktops, white splashback, ceramic splashback, stainless steel appliances, an island and dark hardwood flooring.
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Design Squared Architects
Chris Snook
Inspiration for a contemporary u-shaped kitchen in London with a double-bowl sink, flat-panel cabinets, white cabinets and grey splashback.
Inspiration for a contemporary u-shaped kitchen in London with a double-bowl sink, flat-panel cabinets, white cabinets and grey splashback.
Angus Mackenzie Architect
This freestanding brick house had no real useable living spaces for a young family, with no connection to a vast north facing rear yard.
The solution was simple – to separate the ‘old from the new’ – by reinstating the original 1930’s roof line, demolishing the ‘60’s lean-to rear addition, and adding a contemporary open plan pavilion on the same level as the deck and rear yard.
Recycled face bricks, Western Red Cedar and Colorbond roofing make up the restrained palette that blend with the existing house and the large trees found in the rear yard. The pavilion is surrounded by clerestory fixed glazing allowing filtered sunlight through the trees, as well as further enhancing the feeling of bringing the garden ‘into’ the internal living space.
Rainwater is harvested into an above ground tank for reuse for toilet flushing, the washing machine and watering the garden.
The cedar batten screen and hardwood pergola off the rear addition, create a secondary outdoor living space providing privacy from the adjoining neighbours. Large eave overhangs block the high summer sun, while allowing the lower winter sun to penetrate deep into the addition.
Photography by Sarah Braden
James McDonald Associate Architects, PC
Sean Shanahan Photography
Photo of an expansive classic back veranda in DC Metro with an outdoor kitchen, natural stone paving and a roof extension.
Photo of an expansive classic back veranda in DC Metro with an outdoor kitchen, natural stone paving and a roof extension.
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
Folkway Design & Wares Co.
Photography: Jen Burner Photography
This is an example of a small country u-shaped kitchen in New Orleans with a belfast sink, shaker cabinets, grey cabinets, wood worktops, white splashback, mosaic tiled splashback, stainless steel appliances, painted wood flooring, no island, brown worktops and white floors.
This is an example of a small country u-shaped kitchen in New Orleans with a belfast sink, shaker cabinets, grey cabinets, wood worktops, white splashback, mosaic tiled splashback, stainless steel appliances, painted wood flooring, no island, brown worktops and white floors.
Threefold Architects
Charles Hosea
Photo of a contemporary house exterior in London with three floors and mixed cladding.
Photo of a contemporary house exterior in London with three floors and mixed cladding.
Dalecki Design
Photo by Dion Robeson
Photo of a contemporary dining room in Perth with white walls, dark hardwood flooring and no fireplace.
Photo of a contemporary dining room in Perth with white walls, dark hardwood flooring and no fireplace.
User
Photo of a nautical formal enclosed living room in London with white walls, a standard fireplace and white floors.
Stump's Decks and Porches
Without detracting from the deck's appearance, the dividing deck boards eliminate the need for deck board splicing (due to the deck length being over 20').
Dan Nelson, Designs Northwest Architects
Waterside porch off kitchen - dining space. Photography by Ian Gleadle.
Medium sized eclectic back veranda in Seattle with with columns and a roof extension.
Medium sized eclectic back veranda in Seattle with with columns and a roof extension.
MTA Architecture & Design
Design ideas for a contemporary kitchen in London with stainless steel appliances and concrete flooring.
RUSSIAN FOR FISH
Peter Landers
This is an example of a contemporary kitchen/diner in London with flat-panel cabinets, concrete worktops, grey splashback, medium hardwood flooring, an island and brown floors.
This is an example of a contemporary kitchen/diner in London with flat-panel cabinets, concrete worktops, grey splashback, medium hardwood flooring, an island and brown floors.
City Lofts London
The homeowners returned to us to build the dream kitchen extension, after we had converted the loft three years before. Our design brief was simple but tricky - design and build a lean-to extension that doesn’t look difficult or boring, what do so in an and affordable way. This is what we came up with: elegant, complimentary angles that flood the new space with light and air
City Lofts London
The homeowners returned to us to build the dream kitchen extension, after we had converted the loft three years before. Our design brief was simple but tricky - design and build a lean-to extension that doesn’t look difficult or boring, what do so in an and affordable way. This is what we came up with: elegant, complimentary angles that flood the new space with light and air
City Lofts London
The homeowners returned to us to build the dream kitchen extension, after we had converted the loft three years before. Our design brief was simple but tricky - design and build a lean-to extension that doesn’t look difficult or boring, what do so in an and affordable way. This is what we came up with: elegant, complimentary angles that flood the new space with light and air
City Lofts London
The homeowners returned to us to build the dream kitchen extension, after we had converted the loft three years before. Our design brief was simple but tricky - design and build a lean-to extension that doesn’t look difficult or boring, what do so in an and affordable way. This is what we came up with: elegant, complimentary angles that flood the new space with light and air
Search results for Lean To Extension in Home Photos
City Lofts London
The homeowners returned to us to build the dream kitchen extension, after we had converted the loft three years before. Our design brief was simple but tricky - design and build a lean-to extension that doesn’t look difficult or boring, what do so in an and affordable way. This is what we came up with: elegant, complimentary angles that flood the new space with light and air
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