Search results for "Volume ceiling" in Home Design Ideas
Menendez Architects PC
The living room was made more spacious by removing part of the mezzanine that previously hovered over it and by replacing some of the dark wood paneling with painted drywall.
Andrulaitis + Mixon
Photo Credit: Jim Bartsch
Example of a trendy great room design in Santa Barbara with beige walls and no fireplace
Example of a trendy great room design in Santa Barbara with beige walls and no fireplace
Charlie Barnett Associates
Inspiration for a modern open concept slate floor and blue floor living room remodel in San Francisco with no tv
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Phil Kean Design Group
This contemporary home features clean lines and extensive details, a unique entrance of floating steps over moving water, attractive focal points, great flows of volumes and spaces, and incorporates large areas of indoor/outdoor living on both levels.
Taking aging in place into consideration, there are master suites on both levels, elevator, and garage entrance. The home’s great room and kitchen open to the lanai, summer kitchen, and garden via folding and pocketing glass doors and uses a retractable screen concealed in the lanai. When the screen is lowered, it holds up to 90% of the home’s conditioned air and keeps out insects. The 2nd floor master and exercise rooms open to balconies.
The challenge was to connect the main home to the existing guest house which was accomplished with a center garden and floating step walkway which mimics the main home’s entrance. The garden features a fountain, fire pit, pool, outdoor arbor dining area, and LED lighting under the floating steps.
Fox Construction, Inc.
Tim Murphy Photography
Example of a large tuscan medium tone wood floor and brown floor kitchen/dining room combo design in Denver with beige walls
Example of a large tuscan medium tone wood floor and brown floor kitchen/dining room combo design in Denver with beige walls
Griffin Enright Architects
A view of the living room with folded ceiling and a clerestory window to bring light into a loft-like space.
Mid-sized minimalist open concept light wood floor living room photo in San Francisco with a concealed tv and white walls
Mid-sized minimalist open concept light wood floor living room photo in San Francisco with a concealed tv and white walls
NIMMO Architecture
Rural, Studio, Metal, Barn, Sustainable, Affordable
Trendy bedroom photo in Dallas with white walls
Trendy bedroom photo in Dallas with white walls
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Grand Bay Construction
Cody Jordan
Example of a trendy open concept painted wood floor and gray floor living room design in Miami with gray walls
Example of a trendy open concept painted wood floor and gray floor living room design in Miami with gray walls
CLB Architects
In the main volume of the Riverbend residence, the double height kitchen/dining/living area opens in its length to north and south with floor-to-ceiling windows.
Residential architecture and interior design by CLB in Jackson, Wyoming – Bozeman, Montana.
AIBD - American Institute of Building Design
The appeal of this Spanish Colonial home starts at the front elevation with clean lines and elegant simplicity and continues to the interior with white-washed walls adorned in old world decor. In true hacienda form, the central focus of this home is the 2-story volume of the Kitchen-Dining-Living rooms. From the moment of arrival, we are treated with an expansive view past the catwalk to the large entertaining space with expansive full height windows at the rear. The wood ceiling beams, hardwood floors, and swooped fireplace walls are reminiscent of old world Spanish or Andalusian architecture.
An ARDA for Model Home Design goes to
Southwest Design Studio, Inc.
Designers: Stephen Shively with partners in building
From: Bee Cave, Texas
Northworks Architects + Planners
As part of the Walnut Farm project, Northworks was commissioned to convert an existing 19th century barn into a fully-conditioned home. Working closely with the local contractor and a barn restoration consultant, Northworks conducted a thorough investigation of the existing structure. The resulting design is intended to preserve the character of the original barn while taking advantage of its spacious interior volumes and natural materials.
FINNE Architects
The Eagle Harbor Cabin is located on a wooded waterfront property on Lake Superior, at the northerly edge of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, about 300 miles northeast of Minneapolis.
The wooded 3-acre site features the rocky shoreline of Lake Superior, a lake that sometimes behaves like the ocean. The 2,000 SF cabin cantilevers out toward the water, with a 40-ft. long glass wall facing the spectacular beauty of the lake. The cabin is composed of two simple volumes: a large open living/dining/kitchen space with an open timber ceiling structure and a 2-story “bedroom tower,” with the kids’ bedroom on the ground floor and the parents’ bedroom stacked above.
The interior spaces are wood paneled, with exposed framing in the ceiling. The cabinets use PLYBOO, a FSC-certified bamboo product, with mahogany end panels. The use of mahogany is repeated in the custom mahogany/steel curvilinear dining table and in the custom mahogany coffee table. The cabin has a simple, elemental quality that is enhanced by custom touches such as the curvilinear maple entry screen and the custom furniture pieces. The cabin utilizes native Michigan hardwoods such as maple and birch. The exterior of the cabin is clad in corrugated metal siding, offset by the tall fireplace mass of Montana ledgestone at the east end.
The house has a number of sustainable or “green” building features, including 2x8 construction (40% greater insulation value); generous glass areas to provide natural lighting and ventilation; large overhangs for sun and snow protection; and metal siding for maximum durability. Sustainable interior finish materials include bamboo/plywood cabinets, linoleum floors, locally-grown maple flooring and birch paneling, and low-VOC paints.
CLB Architects
The Peaks View residence is sited near Wilson, Wyoming, in a grassy meadow, adjacent to the Teton mountain range. The design solution for the project had to satisfy two conflicting goals: the finished project must fit seamlessly into a neighborhood with distinctly conservative design guidelines while satisfying the owners desire to create a unique home with roots in the modern idiom.
Within these constraints, the architect created an assemblage of building volumes to break down the scale of the 6,500 square foot program. A pair of two-story gabled structures present a traditional face to the neighborhood, while the single-story living pavilion, with its expansive shed roof, tilts up to recognize views and capture daylight for the primary living spaces. This trio of buildings wrap around a south-facing courtyard, a warm refuge for outdoor living during the short summer season in Wyoming. Broad overhangs, articulated in wood, taper to thin steel “brim” that protects the buildings from harsh western weather. The roof of the living pavilion extends to create a covered outdoor extension for the main living space. The cast-in-place concrete chimney and site walls anchor the composition of forms to the flat site. The exterior is clad primarily in cedar siding; two types were used to create pattern, texture and depth in the elevations.
While the building forms and exterior materials conform to the design guidelines and fit within the context of the neighborhood, the interiors depart to explore a well-lit, refined and warm character. Wood, plaster and a reductive approach to detailing and materials complete the interior expression. Display for a Kimono was deliberately incorporated into the entry sequence. Its influence on the interior can be seen in the delicate stair screen and the language for the millwork which is conceived as simple wood containers within spaces. Ample glazing provides excellent daylight and a connection to the site.
Photos: Matthew Millman
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McKee & Company
Large transitional formal and enclosed carpeted and beige floor living room photo in Orange County with beige walls, a standard fireplace, a stone fireplace and no tv
Moore Architects, PC
The new house sits back from the suburban road, a pipe-stem lot hidden in the trees. The owner/building had requested a modern, clean statement of his residence.
A single rectangular volume houses the main program: living, dining, kitchen to the north, garage, private bedrooms and baths to the south. Secondary building blocks attached to the west and east faces contain special places: entry, stair, music room and master bath.
The double height living room with full height corner windows erodes the solidity of the house, opening it to the outside. The porch, beyond the living room, stretches the house into the landscape, the transition anchored with the double-fronted fireplace.
The modern vocabulary of the house is a careful delineation of the parts - cantilevering roofs lift and extend beyond the planar stucco, siding and glazed wall surfaces. Where the house meets ground, crushed stone along the perimeter base mimics the roof lines above, the sharply defined edges of lawn held away from the foundation. The open steel stair stands separate from adjacent walls. Kitchen and bathroom cabinets are objects in space - visually (and where possible, physically) disengaged from ceiling, wall and floor.
It's the movement through the volumes of space, along surfaces, and out into the landscape, that unifies the house.
Envision Web
Stuart Wade, Envision Web
Kitchen - traditional l-shaped kitchen idea in Atlanta with recessed-panel cabinets, medium tone wood cabinets, beige backsplash and black appliances
Kitchen - traditional l-shaped kitchen idea in Atlanta with recessed-panel cabinets, medium tone wood cabinets, beige backsplash and black appliances
CSI Custom Homes
Elegant l-shaped kitchen photo in San Francisco with recessed-panel cabinets and beige cabinets
Showing Results for "Volume Ceiling"
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Sage Designs
Comfortable Study with built-in shelving, decorative dentil crown molding and volume ceiling with truss beams.
Example of a large classic freestanding desk medium tone wood floor, brown floor and vaulted ceiling home office library design in Other with gray walls, a standard fireplace and a stone fireplace
Example of a large classic freestanding desk medium tone wood floor, brown floor and vaulted ceiling home office library design in Other with gray walls, a standard fireplace and a stone fireplace
Lizette Marie Interior Design
Photo Credit: David Duncan Livingston
Inspiration for a mid-sized transitional medium tone wood floor and brown floor enclosed dining room remodel in San Francisco with multicolored walls
Inspiration for a mid-sized transitional medium tone wood floor and brown floor enclosed dining room remodel in San Francisco with multicolored walls
Garret Cord Werner Architects & Interior Designers
This home was built in 1952. the was completely gutted and the floor plans was opened to provide for a more contemporary lifestyle. A simple palette of concrete, wood, metal, and stone provide an enduring atmosphere that respects the vintage of the home.
Please note that due to the volume of inquiries & client privacy regarding our projects we unfortunately do not have the ability to answer basic questions about materials, specifications, construction methods, or paint colors. Thank you for taking the time to review our projects. We look forward to hearing from you if you are considering to hire an architect or interior Designer.
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