Search results for "Traditional house in spain" in Home Design Ideas
ZeroEnergy Design
This vacation residence located in a beautiful ocean community on the New England coast features high performance and creative use of space in a small package. ZED designed the simple, gable-roofed structure and proposed the Passive House standard. The resulting home consumes only one-tenth of the energy for heating compared to a similar new home built only to code requirements.
Architecture | ZeroEnergy Design
Construction | Aedi Construction
Photos | Greg Premru Photography
camilleriparismode
camilleriparismode projects and design team were approached by the young owners of a 1920s sliema townhouse who wished to transform the un-converted property into their new family home.
the design team created a new set of plans which involved demolishing a dividing wall between the 2 front rooms, resulting in a larger living area and family room enjoying natural light through 2 maltese balconies.
the juxtaposition of old and new, traditional and modern, rough and smooth is the design element that links all the areas of the house. the seamless micro cement floor in a warm taupe/concrete hue, connects the living room with the kitchen and the dining room, contrasting with the classic decor elements throughout the rest of the space that recall the architectural features of the house.
this beautiful property enjoys another 2 bedrooms for the couple’s children, as well as a roof garden for entertaining family and friends. the house’s classic townhouse feel together with camilleriparismode projects and design team’s careful maximisation of the internal spaces, have truly made it the perfect family home.
Acorn Garden Houses
This is an example of a medium sized nautical back custom shaped swimming pool in Melbourne with natural stone paving and a pool house.
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SV Design
Having been neglected for nearly 50 years, this home was rescued by new owners who sought to restore the home to its original grandeur. Prominently located on the rocky shoreline, its presence welcomes all who enter into Marblehead from the Boston area. The exterior respects tradition; the interior combines tradition with a sparse respect for proportion, scale and unadorned beauty of space and light.
This project was featured in Design New England Magazine.
http://bit.ly/SVResurrection
Photo Credit: Eric Roth
Sean O'Kane AIA Architect P.C.
The Pool House was completed in 2008 and contains an intimate sitting area with a facade of glass doors designed to be hidden away, a private bath, bar and space for pool storage.
Photography by Barry A. Hyman.
Contractor Larry Larkin Builder
Thompson Bradford Architects Ltd
Andy Spain Photography
Inspiration for a white and large traditional render house exterior in Hertfordshire with three floors and a pitched roof.
Inspiration for a white and large traditional render house exterior in Hertfordshire with three floors and a pitched roof.
Raji RM
Rikki Snyder
Traditional kitchen in DC Metro with a submerged sink, open cabinets, white cabinets, marble worktops and medium hardwood flooring.
Traditional kitchen in DC Metro with a submerged sink, open cabinets, white cabinets, marble worktops and medium hardwood flooring.
KellyBaron
Our goal when re designing and rebuilding this home was to keep within the scope of the long established neighborhood where residents have lived for decades. In other words not to over build and create an overbuilt home without charm or character. We kept the front facade of the house as the only wall left standing and designed a new solar home updated to current standards with the curb appeal and charm it originally had when it was first built. A new front porch was built along with a new approach with blue stone. The original footprint was enlarged for a spacious master suite which included walk in closet, elegant master Bath and a large but charming master bedroom overlooking the manicured grounds and pool. A 2 story dining room with windows galore was added with a view of a the rear garden. The house is not overly large but lives large with a separate living room, dining room, family room and 3 bedrooms and ensuites.
Evens Architects
Santa Monica Beach House, Evens Architects - Kitchen
Photo by Manolo Langis
This is an example of a beach style kitchen in Los Angeles with glass-front cabinets, white cabinets, wood worktops, grey splashback, metro tiled splashback and stainless steel appliances.
This is an example of a beach style kitchen in Los Angeles with glass-front cabinets, white cabinets, wood worktops, grey splashback, metro tiled splashback and stainless steel appliances.
Andrea Collins
www.brandoninteriordesign.co.uk
You don't get a second chance to make a first impression !! The front door of this grand country house has been given a new lease of life by painting the outdated "orange" wood in a bold and elegant green. The look is further enhanced by the topiary in antique stone plant holders.
Bali Construction
This charming Craftsman classic style home has a large inviting front porch, original architectural details and woodwork throughout. The original two-story 1,963 sq foot home was built in 1912 with 4 bedrooms and 1 bathroom. Our design build project added 700 sq feet to the home and 1,050 sq feet to the outdoor living space. This outdoor living space included a roof top deck and a 2 story lower deck all made of Ipe decking and traditional custom designed railings. In the formal dining room, our master craftsman restored and rebuilt the trim, wainscoting, beamed ceilings, and the built-in hutch. The quaint kitchen was brought back to life with new cabinetry made from douglas fir and also upgraded with a brand new bathroom and laundry room. Throughout the home we replaced the windows with energy effecient double pane windows and new hardwood floors that also provide radiant heating. It is evident that attention to detail was a primary focus during this project as our team worked diligently to maintain the traditional look and feel of the home
Andrew Robbins Fine Custom Homes, Inc.
Pool house remodel / historic preservation
Inspiration for a rustic custom shaped swimming pool in Philadelphia with a pool house.
Inspiration for a rustic custom shaped swimming pool in Philadelphia with a pool house.
Gerber Berend Design Build, Inc.
David Patterson for Gerber Berend Design Build, Steamboat Springs, Colorado
Inspiration for a medium sized and blue traditional two floor house exterior in Denver with vinyl cladding and a pitched roof.
Inspiration for a medium sized and blue traditional two floor house exterior in Denver with vinyl cladding and a pitched roof.
Gardner/Fox Associates, Inc
The local fieldstone blend covering the facade, the roof pitch, roofing materials, and architectural details of the new pool structure matches that of the main house. The rough hewn trusses in the hearth room mimic the structural components of the family room in the main house.
Sliding barn doors at the front & back of the poorhouse allow the structure to be fully opened or closed.
To provide access for cords of firewood to be delivered directly to the pool house, a cart path was cut through the woods from the driveway around the back of the house.
YARD Architects
A playful re-imagining of a Victorian terrace with a large rear extension.
The project started as a problem solving exercise – the owner of the house was very tall and he had never been able to have a shower in the pokey outrigger bathroom, there was simply not enough ceiling height. The lower ground floor kitchen also suffered from low ceilings and was dark and uninviting. There was very little connection to the garden, surrounded by trees, which felt like a lost opportunity. The whole house needed rethinking.
The solution we proposed was to extend into the generous garden at the rear and reconstruct the existing outrigger with an extra storey. We used the outrigger to relocate the staircase to the lower ground floor, moving it from the centre of the house into a double height space in the extension. This gave the house a very generous sense of height and space and allows light to flood into the kitchen and hall from high level windows. These provide glances of the surrounding tress as you descent to the dining room.
The extension allows the kitchen and dining room to push further into the garden, making the most of the views and light. A strip rooflight over the kitchen wall units brings light deep into the space and washes the kitchen with sunlight during the day. Behind the kitchen, where there was no access to natural light, we tucked a utility room and shower room, with a second sitting room at the front of the house. The extension has a green sedum roof to ensure it feels like part of the garden when seen from the upper floors of the house. We used a pale white and yellow brick to complement the colour of the London stock brickwork, but maintain a contemporary aesthetic. Oak windows and sliding door add a warmth to the extension and tie in with the materials we used internally.
Internally there is a palette of bold colours to define the living spaces, including an entirely yellow corridor the client has named ‘The Yolky Way’ leading from the kitchen to the front reception room, complete with hidden yellow doors. These are offset against more natural materials such as the oak batten cladding, which define the dining space and also line the back wall of the kitchen concealing the fridge door and larder units. A bespoke terrazzo counter unites the colours of the floor, oak cladding and cupboard doors and the tiled floor leads seamlessly to the outside patio, leading the eye back into the garden.
A new bathroom with a generous ceiling height was placed in the reconstructed outrigger, with triple aspect windows, including a picture window at the end of the bath framing views of the trees in the garden.
Upstairs we kept the traditional Victorian layout, refurbished the windows and shutters, reinstating cornice and ceiling roses to the principal rooms. At every point in the project the ergonomics of the house were considered, tall doors, very high kitchen worktops and always maximising ceiling heights, ensuring the house was more suited to its tall owner.
Moore Architects, PC
Originally built in 1929, this simple two story center hall white wood clapboard colonial satisfied all of the early 20th century requirements; formal front elevation with full porch, central foyer/stair hall bounded by formal rooms, private bedroom space on the second floor, and, no relationship to the backyard.
Americans love their early century houses, but they do not love the way they function, forsaking usable modern first floor spaces such as kitchen, mudroom, family room, powder room, and a strong connection to the back yard.
In this case, the solid house ignored the backyard with its original 1920’s kitchen dumping out onto the left side of the house; there was a total lack of connection. The project program asked for a new kitchen and the other missing pieces, but most importantly, a clear, strong connection to the vast rear lawn with an assemblage of spaces starting with the kitchen flowing into the family room, then flowing into the screened porch that spilled onto the rear porch, and then culminates to the hardscape and softscape of the vast lush lawn.
The new architecture is simple like the house; a new gabled volume of open space for the family room that feels connected and then disengaged from the house by a gasket addition holding the kitchen and utility entrance; a strong center access through the spaces carrying the focus from indoors to outdoors; traditional forms creating a crisp modern aesthetic of material, light, form and detail.
The addition is respectful to the original house, but not without imposing its own place in time, commanding the rear elevation in a diminutive manner.
All photos by Hoachlander Davis Photography.
Orren Pickell Building Group
http://www.pickellbuilders.com. Photography by Linda Oyama Bryan. Brick and Stucco Addition and Remodel of Traditional Northbrook House. Cedar shutters and brackets. Cedar shingle roof. Gazebo Style Screened Porch on Northbrook Brick and Stucco Traditional House.
Flavin Architects
This remodel of a mid century gem is located in the town of Lincoln, MA a hot bed of modernist homes inspired by Gropius’ own house built nearby in the 1940’s. By the time the house was built, modernism had evolved from the Gropius era, to incorporate the rural vibe of Lincoln with spectacular exposed wooden beams and deep overhangs.
The design rejects the traditional New England house with its enclosing wall and inward posture. The low pitched roofs, open floor plan, and large windows openings connect the house to nature to make the most of its rural setting. The bathroom floor and walls are white Thassos marble.
Photo by: Nat Rea Photography
Winder Gibson Architects
Reflecting the clients' East Coast roots, this new home combines traditional detailing such as white wood siding and a generous porch with the wine-country lifestyle. The building is sited among a grove of camellia trees at the end of a driveway through pinot noir vines. A subterranean cellar houses the owner's collection of French and California wines. The farmstead's old water tower was repurposed as a library. Complex site issues including the well, septic field and setbacks from the creek were navigated.
Search results for Traditional House In Spain in Home Photos
Flavin Architects
This remodel of a mid century gem is located in the town of Lincoln, MA a hot bed of modernist homes inspired by Gropius’ own house built nearby in the 1940’s. By the time the house was built, modernism had evolved from the Gropius era, to incorporate the rural vibe of Lincoln with spectacular exposed wooden beams and deep overhangs.
The design rejects the traditional New England house with its enclosing wall and inward posture. The low pitched roofs, open floor plan, and large windows openings connect the house to nature to make the most of its rural setting.
Photo by: Nat Rea Photography
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