Originally built in the 1950s as a Japanese modern, this home had the good fortune of attracting a new owner/architect whose specialty is Japanese architecture- a perfect match. (Dana Buntrock, Architect)
This photo has 4 questions
sagemodern wrote:
Who is the manufacturer of the trough sink? What are the dimensions? »
UC Berkeley professor The guys should have told me they posted this. My apologies for the delayed response!
It is indeed a wet floor throughout. I think the slope is a bit shallower than I would like now. The rocks on the left cover a stainless steel trough. One word of warning: don't make that the lowest drain in the house. We've had to wash all those rocks in bleach when roots clog the waste line outside the house--and kids love to play with the stones.
UC Berkeley professor The guys should have told me they posted this. My apologies for the delayed response! Soapstone, hand cut on site. Not cheap, but our tile setters were rockstars.
houscom Your Star for answering all these questions! - I too love the Tiles - they way they have been laid - 3 vertical lines of different widths, then different widths with in each vertical line - has all that has been achieved just through hand cutting, is that correct? Does anyone know if there is any chance of finding a commercial range that accommodates this style of patterning - Love the effect, it makes the whole space very interesting! Love the slab for the vanity too - great bathroom!
Originally built in the 1950s as a Japanese modern, this home had the good fortune of attracting a new owner/architect whose specialty is Japanese architecture- a perfect match. (Dana Buntrock, Archite