bedroom wing with a light filled toy room, removed the wall between kitchen and living to create an island kitchen and make the home “live bigger.” A potentially oppressively long hallway to get to the toy room (which we wanted to relate to the backyard) was widened by a desk nook and brightened with
bedroom wing with a light filled toy room, removed the wall between kitchen and living to create an island kitchen and make the home “live bigger.” A potentially oppressively long hallway to get to the toy room (which we wanted to relate to the backyard) was widened by a desk nook and brightened with
framed wings makes for a hybrid style Mountain Home. Designed by Brian Higgins of RAW Architecture and Built by Brian L. Wray of Mountain Log Homes of Colorado, Inc.
Added to 12 ideabooks Last comment "Like the windowing and the curving roofline."
a gull-wing shell that sits on a solid concrete base.
Generous eating/play terraces face the views of the bay and West Seattle to the southwest while a small sunken garden to the north is designed to celebrate the houses’ rainwater. A large swath of Seattle Parks + Recreation land to the east of the