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Kadello & Larsen Architectural Designs
Ispirazione per la facciata di una casa bianca country a due piani di medie dimensioni con rivestimento in legno
Cummings Architecture + Interiors
When Cummings Architects first met with the owners of this understated country farmhouse, the building’s layout and design was an incoherent jumble. The original bones of the building were almost unrecognizable. All of the original windows, doors, flooring, and trims – even the country kitchen – had been removed. Mathew and his team began a thorough design discovery process to find the design solution that would enable them to breathe life back into the old farmhouse in a way that acknowledged the building’s venerable history while also providing for a modern living by a growing family.
The redesign included the addition of a new eat-in kitchen, bedrooms, bathrooms, wrap around porch, and stone fireplaces. To begin the transforming restoration, the team designed a generous, twenty-four square foot kitchen addition with custom, farmers-style cabinetry and timber framing. The team walked the homeowners through each detail the cabinetry layout, materials, and finishes. Salvaged materials were used and authentic craftsmanship lent a sense of place and history to the fabric of the space.
The new master suite included a cathedral ceiling showcasing beautifully worn salvaged timbers. The team continued with the farm theme, using sliding barn doors to separate the custom-designed master bath and closet. The new second-floor hallway features a bold, red floor while new transoms in each bedroom let in plenty of light. A summer stair, detailed and crafted with authentic details, was added for additional access and charm.
Finally, a welcoming farmer’s porch wraps around the side entry, connecting to the rear yard via a gracefully engineered grade. This large outdoor space provides seating for large groups of people to visit and dine next to the beautiful outdoor landscape and the new exterior stone fireplace.
Though it had temporarily lost its identity, with the help of the team at Cummings Architects, this lovely farmhouse has regained not only its former charm but also a new life through beautifully integrated modern features designed for today’s family.
Photo by Eric Roth
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.
Mihaly Slocombe
Hood House is a playful protector that respects the heritage character of Carlton North whilst celebrating purposeful change. It is a luxurious yet compact and hyper-functional home defined by an exploration of contrast: it is ornamental and restrained, subdued and lively, stately and casual, compartmental and open.
For us, it is also a project with an unusual history. This dual-natured renovation evolved through the ownership of two separate clients. Originally intended to accommodate the needs of a young family of four, we shifted gears at the eleventh hour and adapted a thoroughly resolved design solution to the needs of only two. From a young, nuclear family to a blended adult one, our design solution was put to a test of flexibility.
The result is a subtle renovation almost invisible from the street yet dramatic in its expressive qualities. An oblique view from the northwest reveals the playful zigzag of the new roof, the rippling metal hood. This is a form-making exercise that connects old to new as well as establishing spatial drama in what might otherwise have been utilitarian rooms upstairs. A simple palette of Australian hardwood timbers and white surfaces are complimented by tactile splashes of brass and rich moments of colour that reveal themselves from behind closed doors.
Our internal joke is that Hood House is like Lazarus, risen from the ashes. We’re grateful that almost six years of hard work have culminated in this beautiful, protective and playful house, and so pleased that Glenda and Alistair get to call it home.
We Love Plants - Garden Design by Nic Howard
Esempio della villa bianca classica a due piani con tetto a capanna, copertura a scandole, tetto rosso e scale
BBA Architects
This Lincoln Park renovation transformed a conventionally built Chicago two-flat into a custom single-family residence with a modern, open floor plan. The white masonry exterior paired with new black windows brings a contemporary edge to this city home.
Linnane Homes
Foto della villa grande bianca country a due piani con rivestimento in mattone verniciato, tetto a capanna, copertura a scandole, tetto nero e pannelli e listelle di legno
McCall Design & Planning
Idee per la villa bianca country a due piani con tetto a capanna, copertura a scandole, tetto grigio e pannelli e listelle di legno
studio g ARCHITECTURE
Ispirazione per la villa grande bianca moderna a un piano con tetto piano e rivestimento in stucco
Carmit Oron Interior Design
Idee per la villa bianca moderna a un piano di medie dimensioni con rivestimento in stucco, tetto a padiglione e copertura a scandole
Visbeen Architects
Idee per la villa bianca country a due piani di medie dimensioni con rivestimento con lastre in cemento, tetto a capanna e copertura mista
Dacoda Homes
Immagine della villa bianca country a due piani con tetto a capanna e copertura in metallo o lamiera
Cascade West Development
Inspired by the majesty of the Northern Lights and this family's everlasting love for Disney, this home plays host to enlighteningly open vistas and playful activity. Like its namesake, the beloved Sleeping Beauty, this home embodies family, fantasy and adventure in their truest form. Visions are seldom what they seem, but this home did begin 'Once Upon a Dream'. Welcome, to The Aurora.
User
Immagine della villa grande bianca country a due piani con rivestimento in stucco, tetto a padiglione e copertura a scandole
DJK Custom Homes
Immagine della villa grande bianca country a due piani con rivestimento con lastre in cemento e copertura a scandole
ADG Lighting
Esempio della villa bianca mediterranea a due piani con rivestimento in stucco, tetto a padiglione e copertura in tegole
Solitude Homes
Esempio della villa grande bianca country a due piani con rivestimento in legno, tetto a capanna e pannelli e listelle di legno
Natural Selections LLC
Front exterior of the Edge Hill Project.
Immagine della villa bianca classica a due piani con rivestimento in mattoni e copertura a scandole
Immagine della villa bianca classica a due piani con rivestimento in mattoni e copertura a scandole
Allen Construction
The clients wanted to remodel and update this 4,300 sq. ft., three story, three-bedroom, five bath, Spanish Colonial style residence to meet their design aesthetic.
Architect: The Warner Group.
Photographer: Kelly Teich
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