Risultati di ricerca per "Geometri" in Idee per la casa
Kia Designs
Anna Stathaki
Modern take on a mid century loft living room. Original features have been restored and highlighted, but blended with high tech modern comforts. Furniture from West Elm, Swoon Editions and Maison Du Monde.
Auhaus Architecture
Living room looking out to garden and deck
Photography: Auhaus Architecture
Immagine di case e interni design
Immagine di case e interni design
Haus Interior Design
Who wouldn't fall in love with the Water Street building, and the elegant industrial vibe? The light that floods in through the floor-to-ceiling windows makes this a perfect spot to entertain and host friends from California or adult kids who visit. The location can't be beat--these clients ride their bikes to meet friends for lunch or a tour through the Hirschhorn. We knocked down a wall to open the kitchen, and added modern furnishings punctuated by splashes of deep orangey-red. High contrast and lots of rich textures can be found throughout this urban loft.
Photography: Stacy Zarin Goldberg
Trova il professionista locale adatto per il tuo progetto
Johnny Grey Studios.
Our brief was to create a calm, modern country kitchen that avoided cliches - and to intrinsically link to the garden. A weekend escape for a busy family who come down to escape the city, to enjoy their art collection, garden and cook together. The design springs from my neuroscience research and is based on appealing to our hard wired needs, our fundamental instincts - sociability, easy movement, art, comfort, hearth, smells, readiness for visitors, view of outdoors and a place to eat.
The key design innovation was the use of soft geometry, not so much in the planning but in the three dimensionality of the furniture which grows out of the floor in an organic way. The soft geometry is in the profile of the pieces, not in their footprint. The users can stroke the furniture, lie against it and feel its softness, all of which helps the visitors to kitchen linger and chat.
The fireplace is located in the middle between the cooking zone and the garden. There is plenty of room to draw up a chair and just sit around. The fold-out doors let the landscape into the space in a generous way, especially on summer days when the weather makes the indoors and outdoors come together. The sight lines from the main cooking and preparation island offer views of the garden throughout the seasons, as well as people coming into the room and those seating at the table - so it becomes a command position or what we call the sweet spot. This often results in there being a family competition to do the cooking.
The woods are Canadian Maple, Australian rosewood and Eucalyptus. All appliances are Gaggenau and Fisher and Paykel.
Walker Zanger
Stone Mosaic
A Tangent is defined as ''a line that touches but does not intersect a curve.'' It is a word that describes geometry, but also one used to describe heading off in directions unknown. Both definitions are appropriate for our new collections of decorative stone mosaics, in which abstract geometry and mid century modern design influences merge with the beauty of natural stone, creating a richness that will beguile you anew each time you see it.
Usage:
Residential: All interior surfaces, including bathroom walls/floors*, shower walls/ floors and kitchen backsplashes. Exterior walls. Commercial: Interior and exterior walls and interior floors. *Flannel not recommended for use in showers or exteriors. See Tools | Usage Guide for more details.
See more on this product on the Walker Zanger website here: http://walkerzanger.com/collections/products.php?view=style&mat=Contemporary&coll=Tangent
Johnny Grey Studios.
Our brief was to create a calm, modern country kitchen that avoided cliches - and to intrinsically link to the garden. A weekend escape for a busy family who come down to escape the city, to enjoy their art collection, garden and cook together. The design springs from my neuroscience research and is based on appealing to our hard wired needs, our fundamental instincts - sociability, easy movement, art, comfort, hearth, smells, readiness for visitors, view of outdoors and a place to eat.
The key design innovation was the use of soft geometry, not so much in the planning but in the three dimensionality of the furniture which grows out of the floor in an organic way. The soft geometry is in the profile of the pieces, not in their footprint. The users can stroke the furniture, lie against it and feel its softness, all of which helps the visitors to kitchen linger and chat.
The fireplace is located in the middle between the cooking zone and the garden. There is plenty of room to draw up a chair and just sit around. The fold-out doors let the landscape into the space in a generous way, especially on summer days when the weather makes the indoors and outdoors come together. The sight lines from the main cooking and preparation island offer views of the garden throughout the seasons, as well as people coming into the room and those seating at the table - so it becomes a command position or what we call the sweet spot. This often results in there being a family competition to do the cooking.
The woods are Canadian Maple, Australian rosewood and Eucalyptus. All appliances are Gaggenau and Fisher and Paykel.
Eric Reinholdt, Architect
Corners are eroded on all of the structures to allow the interior space to marry with the exterior views and site. Decks wrap these corners as well and provide an intermediate transition zone between structure and landscape.
Inspired by local fishing shacks and wharf buildings dotting the coast of Maine, this retreat interweaves large glazed openings with simple taut-skinned New England shingled cottages. This skin is incised to open views to the sea beyond and relies on light steel framing and thin braces to preserve the simple forms eroded toward sweeping views.Eric Reinholdt - Project Architect/Lead Designer with Elliott + Elliott Architecture
Photo: Eric Reinholdt
HartmanBaldwin Design/Build
The project consisted of demolishing the existing home built in 1978 and creating a new home with an open floor plan with a large kitchen and family room space that focused on the impressive views of the two-acre property.
Nixon Tulloch Fortey Architecture
Shannon McGrath
Idee per la facciata di una casa contemporanea con rivestimento in legno
Idee per la facciata di una casa contemporanea con rivestimento in legno
McKinney York Architects
The client for this home wanted a modern structure that was suitable for displaying her art-glass collection. Located in a recently developed community, almost every component of the exterior was subject to an array of neighborhood and city ordinances. These were all accommodated while maintaining modern sensibilities and detailing on the exterior, then transitioning to a more minimalist aesthetic on the interior. The one-story building comfortably spreads out on its large lot, embracing a front and back courtyard and allowing views through and from within the transparent center section to other parts of the home. A high volume screened porch, the floating fireplace, and an axial swimming pool provide dramatic moments to the otherwise casual layout of the home.
HB Design Pte Ltd
Ispirazione per un giardino contemporaneo esposto a mezz'ombra con fontane e pavimentazioni in pietra naturale
Natural Balance Home Builders
Foto della facciata di una casa contemporanea con rivestimento in legno e terreno in pendenza
Jeffrey Gordon Smith Landscape Architecture
Ispirazione per un grande giardino contemporaneo esposto a mezz'ombra dietro casa con un giardino in vaso e pedane
Perry Mills & Assoc. Landscape Designer/Architect
Using this technique of lawn edging provides an opportunity to link the geometry of the house and the garden together, creating a sense of seamless transition. If your house has regularly spaced openings or other elements such as veranda posts, try to use these as a rhythmic geometry that extends to the layout of the garden.
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