Search results for "Board and batten" in Home Design Ideas
Linc Thelen Design
Example of a country white two-story exterior home design in Chicago with a mixed material roof
Dream Finders Homes
Bedroom - farmhouse master medium tone wood floor bedroom idea in Jacksonville with green walls and no fireplace
Find the right local pro for your project
Living Stone Design + Build
Stone chimney with a garage door going through it!!! Black Mountain NC
Elegant stone exterior home photo in Other
Elegant stone exterior home photo in Other
MJK Homes, Inc.
Bernard Andre Photography
Inspiration for a country white two-story exterior home remodel in San Francisco
Inspiration for a country white two-story exterior home remodel in San Francisco
Bellwether
This 1970s ranch home in South East Denver was roasting in the summer and freezing in the winter. It was also time to replace the wood composite siding throughout the home. Since Colorado Siding Repair was planning to remove and replace all the siding, we proposed that we install OSB underlayment and insulation under the new siding to improve it’s heating and cooling throughout the year.
After we addressed the insulation of their home, we installed James Hardie ColorPlus® fiber cement siding in Grey Slate with Arctic White trim. James Hardie offers ColorPlus® Board & Batten. We installed Board & Batten in the front of the home and Cedarmill HardiPlank® in the back of the home. Fiber cement siding also helps improve the insulative value of any home because of the quality of the product and how durable it is against Colorado’s harsh climate.
We also installed James Hardie beaded porch panel for the ceiling above the front porch to complete this home exterior make over. We think that this 1970s ranch home looks like a dream now with the full exterior remodel. What do you think?
Noel Cross+Architects
Firmness . . .
Santa Cruz’s historically eclectic Pleasure Point neighborhood has been evolving in its own quirky way for almost a century, and many of its inhabitants seem to have been around just as long. They cling to the relaxed and funky seaside character of their beach community with an almost indignant provinciality. For both client and architect, neighborhood context became the singular focus of the design; to become the “poster child” for compatibility and sustainability. Dozens of photos were taken of the surrounding area as inspiration, with the goal of honoring the idiosyncratic, fine-grained character and informal scale of a neighborhood built over time.
A low, horizontal weathered ipe fence at the street keeps out surfer vans and neighborhood dogs, and a simple gate beckons visitors to stroll down the boardwalk which gently angles toward the front door. A rusted steel fire pit is the focus of this ground level courtyard, which is encircled by a curving cor-ten garden wall graced by a sweep of horse tail reeds and tufts of feather grass.
Extensive day-lighting throughout the home is achieved with high windows placed in all directions in all major rooms, resulting in an abundance of natural light throughout. The clients report having only to turning on lights at nightfall. Notable are the numerous passive solar design elements: careful attention to overhangs and shading devices at South- and West-facing glass to control heat gain, and passive ventilation via high windows in the tower elements, all are significant contributors to the structure’s energy efficiency.
Commodity . . .
Beautiful views of Monterey Bay and the lively local beach scene became the main drivers in plan and section. The upper floor was intentionally set back to preserve ocean views of the neighbor to the north. The surf obsessed clients wished to be able to see the “break” from their upper floor breakfast table perch, able to take a moment’s notice advantage of some killer waves. A tiny 4,500 s.f. lot and a desire to create a ground level courtyard for entertaining dictated the small footprint. A graceful curving cor-ten and stainless steel stair descends from the upper floor living areas, connecting them to a ground level “sanctuary”.
A small detached art studio/surfboard storage shack in the back yard fulfills functional requirements, and includes an outdoor shower for the post-surf hose down. Parking access off a back alley helps to preserve ground floor space, and allows in the southern sun on the view/courtyard side. A relaxed “bare foot beach house” feel is underscored by weathered oak floors, painted re-sawn wall finishes, and painted wood ceilings, which recall the cozy cabins that stood here at Breakers Beach for nearly a century.
Delight . . .
Commemorating the history of the property was a priority for the surfing couple. With that in mind, they created an artistic reproduction of the original sign that decorated the property for many decades as an homage to the “Cozy Cabins at Breakers Beach”, which now graces the foyer.
This casual assemblage of local vernacular architecture has been informed by the consistent scale and simple materials of nearby cottages, shacks, and bungalows. These influences were distilled down to a palette of board and batt, clapboard, and cedar shiplap, and synthesized with bolder forms that evoke images of nearby Capitola Wharf, beach lifeguard towers, and the client’s “surf shack” program requirements. The landscape design takes its cues from boardwalks, rusted steel fire rings, and native grasses, all of which firmly tie the building to its local beach community. The locals have embraced it as one of their own.
Architect - Noel Cross Architect
Landscape Architect - Christopher Yates
Interior Designer - Gina Viscusi-Elson
Lighting Designer - Vita Pehar Design
Contractor - The Conrado Company
DesignARC
Situated on a 3.5 acre, oak-studded ridge atop Santa Barbara's Riviera, the Greene Compound is a 6,500 square foot custom residence with guest house and pool capturing spectacular views of the City, Coastal Islands to the south, and La Cumbre peak to the north. Carefully sited to kiss the tips of many existing large oaks, the home is rustic Mediterranean in style which blends integral color plaster walls with Santa Barbara sandstone and cedar board and batt.
Landscape Architect Lane Goodkind restored the native grass meadow and added a stream bio-swale which complements the rural setting. 20' mahogany, pocketing sliding doors maximize the indoor / outdoor Santa Barbara lifestyle by opening the living spaces to the pool and island view beyond. A monumental exterior fireplace and camp-style margarita bar add to this romantic living. Discreetly buried in the mission tile roof, solar panels help to offset the home's overall energy consumption. Truly an amazing and unique property, the Greene Residence blends in beautifully with the pastoral setting of the ridge while complementing and enhancing this Riviera neighborhood.
Structures Building Inc.
Dan Cutrona Photography
Example of a beach style medium tone wood floor bedroom design in Boston with white walls and no fireplace
Example of a beach style medium tone wood floor bedroom design in Boston with white walls and no fireplace
Fautt Homes
Micheal Hospelt Photography
3000 sf single story home with composite and metal roof.
Example of a mid-sized farmhouse white one-story exterior home design in San Francisco with a mixed material roof
Example of a mid-sized farmhouse white one-story exterior home design in San Francisco with a mixed material roof
EARTHTONE CONSTRUCTION
Country green two-story wood exterior home idea in San Francisco with a gambrel roof
Gardner Architects LLC
Photography by Jim Tetro
This house, built in the 1960s, sits southfacing on a terrific wooded lot in Bethesda, Maryland.
The owners desire a whole-house renovation which would improve the general building fabric and systems, and extend the sense of living out of doors in all seasons.
The original sixties-modern character is preserved and the renovation extends the design forward into a contemporary, modern approach. Connections to and through the site are enhanced through the creation of new larger window and door openings.
Screened porches and decks perch above the sloped and wooded site. The new kitchen and bathrooms allow for opportunities to feel out-of -doors while preparing, cooking, dining, and bathing.
Smart passive strategies guide the environmental choices for this project, including envelope improvements, updated mechanical systems, and on-site stormwater management.
Koncept Design + Build
Client wanted to update their simple vinyl colonial to a modern farmhouse. We got some James Hardie board and batten siding, added a new front porch with a metal roof, and then added a little black and white Sherwin Williams paint.
Banks Design Associates, LTD & Simply Home
This is an example of a coastal porch design in Portland Maine with decking and a roof extension.
Studio McGee
Large transitional guest light wood floor and beige floor bedroom photo in Salt Lake City with white walls
Showing Results for "Board And Batten"
SHELTER Custom-Built Living
Patrick Brickman
Mid-sized country gray two-story concrete fiberboard gable roof idea in Charleston
Mid-sized country gray two-story concrete fiberboard gable roof idea in Charleston
Studio Architects
Robert Hawkins, Be A Deer
Inspiration for a mid-sized country medium tone wood floor and brown floor hallway remodel in Other with white walls
Inspiration for a mid-sized country medium tone wood floor and brown floor hallway remodel in Other with white walls
Gilbert | McLaughlin | Casella Architects, PLC
Tom Gatlin
Mid-sized rustic gable roof idea in Nashville
Mid-sized rustic gable roof idea in Nashville
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