#minimalistic rear porch with an addition to the roof family home
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gatsbycodes · 2 years ago
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Modern Porch (Austin)
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jeremystrele · 5 years ago
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51 Fantastic Front Door Entrance Ideas With Tips To Help You Design Yours
You only get one chance to make a good first impression, so why wouldn’t you make your front door entrance the absolute best it can be? These 51 front door entrance ideas each welcome you with a high-end “hello”, which sets the tone of what’s to come. You’ll find a multitude of unique designs here, which build fabulous first impressions through use of outdoor lighting, creative landscaping, concrete overhangs, cutaway canopies, art sculpture, water features, contrasting materials, and picture-perfect pathways. We take a look at secretive entryways that build anticipation, a number of wide open glass door entrances, grand double front doors, and ultra contemporary pivot front door designs.
Visualizer: Bezmirno Architects   Conjure mystique. Our first front door entranceway leads into an interim courtyard, which builds a sense of peace and tranquility upon the short journey into the house. Stair lights glow mysteriously from under the treads to build anticipation.
Architect: Sanjay Puri Architects   Open out a narrow walkway. Picture windows reveal snap shots of the house interior all along this narrow home entrance. Uplighters illuminate green borders, pushing out the sides of the stepping stone and pebble pathway. Full house tour here.
Photographer: Lance Gerber   Inspiration from Japan. Japanese inspired screen doors reveal hints of a zen courtyard through black lattice, allowing one green space to link to the next.
Architect: RAW Architecture   A different take on the Japanese Shoji inspired entrance.
Architect: Base Architecture   Visualizer: Zmicier Maslouski   Natural meets modern. These rugged stone walls make wonderfully cooling contrast with a golden wood frame front door. A white path and white concrete roof slice cleanly between the dark grey masses.
Architect: MW Works   Nothing to hide. This modern glass wall home has a clear glass front door entrance to match, so there’ll be no hiding from door-to-door salesmen or unexpected in-laws!
Architect: Dada & Partners   Build perceived status with elegant statues. A collection of art sculptures adorn this home entrance, elevating and dramatising the approach. They make a perfect introduction to a house filled with more masterpieces.
Architect: Ramon Esteve Estudio   Capture sunlight with cutaways. The concrete overhang over this home entryway features a deep cutaway so that sunlight hits indirectly, creating light play. Full house tour here.
Architect: Barella Arquitectura   Cutaways also allow sunlight hungry plants to be enriched when planted deep within covered doorways.
Architect: Di Frenna Arquitectos   Add your personal stamp with a huge house number. This one stands out elegantly on a pure white home exterior, where decorative concrete blocks form a lace-like panel over a natural timber front door. Full house tour here.
Visualizer: TOT Render   Nestled in the trees. The overhang on this front door entrance is part concrete, part tree, as the two bridge to form one picturesque canopy.
Architect: BZP Arquitetura   Full height floor to ceiling doors. This front door has no containing upper or lower framework, giving the entranceway seamless grandeur.
Architect: George Smart   Designer: Curiel Arquitectos   Build balance with surroundings. Two trees flank this home’s front entrance, so a double front door design has been selected to compliment the twin tree trunks.
Architect: Tom Meaney Architect   Another perfectly balanced front door entrance, this time with twin trees, benches and wall sconces.
Architect: Cuppett Architects   Wood adds a wealth of warmth to monochrome home exteriors. This cool stone and black powder coated metal architecture becomes infinitely more welcoming with the rich timber addition.
Visualizer: Mai Dũng   Water features add wow factor, atmospheric sound and captivating movement. This one is lit up with outdoor lighting too, so that it can also be admired at night.
Visualizer: Lv Xiaobin   Broader bodies of water give a home entrance a floating effect.
Visualizer: Vizforge   Layered canopies provide shaded walkways out of the burning sun, a pleasant welcome in hot climates.
Designer: Ludwig Mies van der Rohe   Stage it. From the iconic Farnsworth House, this tall staircase entrance has been split in half with a large concrete platform placed between–almost like an outdoor stage.
Architect: Lagula Architects   Cut a sweeping entrance with a curved canopy. This one has a circular skylight to elaborate on the curvaceous theme.
Visualizer: Fathy Ibrahim   Match up the metalwork. This wood slatted front door is flanked by chic outdoor wall sconces that complement the dark silhouette of its black metal bar handle.
Visualizer: TAFF Arquitectos   The linear look. The horizontal timber boards of this modern door design complement the shallow steps that lead to it, and the staircase that climbs to the rear entrance. Fins fashioned into the side of the concrete façade elevate the linear aesthetic.
Designer: Abin Design Studio   L-shaped steps carve out the opportunity for a long and deep planter by the doorway.
Architect: MW Works   The indirect approach. Lay slabs that meander rather than direct, like a mini path of discovery.
Architect: Ames Peterson   Another take on the indirect approach.
Designer: Kym Rodger Design   Whether you have space for planters or not, greenery can grow a welcoming touch. Plant a vertical garden full of different leaf sizes for a deeply textured garden wall that looks like a living work of art.
Designer: Mark Tessier   Romance isn’t dead. Even an ultra modern front door can be given a touch of traditional whimsy and romance by adding a floral arch.
Source: McKimm   Wide steps have dormant potential as concrete planters. Hollow out about half of each step to plant a picture-perfect pathway of slow growing shrubs.
Designer: Unknown   For retro-fit wow factor, erect a pergola over the front entrance. Extend it with a carport for added usability.
Architect: CUBYC arсhitects   Visualizer: Inviz   Peaceful and perfect. Accentuate a crisp minimalist home entrance with perimeter lighting.
Architect: Celso Laetano Arquitetura   Let nature take centre stage, like this fantastic mature tree. A wood front door and wooden garage shutters complement the bark.
Architect: Tate Studio Architects   More beautiful traditional Japanese inspiration, this time from a large zen garden.
Architect: Tate Studio Architects   An arid garden shapes this front entrance, planted with spiky succulents and uniform rows of round cacti. Large paving slabs vibe with a wide slab-like front door design.
Architect: Coates Design   An elbow canopy constructs a sense of intimacy from an angled approach.
Architect: South Coast Architects   A sweeping pathway presents opportunity for shapely plant beds. Turf fillers draw emerald outlines.
Architect: Tim Stewart Architects   Craft a wood slat feature wall to create wondrous height.
Architect: Choeff Levy Fischman   People are intrinsically drawn to waterfalls, and this seven foot water feature has stunning allure by a floating pathway. Note how the front door timber and wood siding horizontally contrast with the fall.
Architect: Richard Cole Architecture   A wood ceiling creates a comforting sense of already being indoors.
Visualizer: Deraya Designs   Play with solid volumes and voids, like this concrete picture frame courtyard.
Architect: Luigi Rosselli Architects   Cluster families of modern outdoor planters in varying heights. Use architectural plants to create shape, and differering leaf colours for interest. Here, green and red foliage rest darkly against white on white front door and entryway decor.
Designer: Masonry Design   Generate character in a modern setting. This fabulous three-piece shuttered front door design sets a scene strength and charm at the same time. Large bowl planters flank either side of the concrete stoop, alive with tiny pricks of intense red flowers.
Architect: SCDA Architects   Photographer: Seth Powers   The faux giant front door. Get the look of a grand door without the extra weight and hinge size by cutting a small door within a matching surround. Timber planks do a great job of disguising the joins.
Sliding glass doors allow the house to stand open to the garden in a welcoming indoor-outdoor living style… Exclusively suited to those who live on a gated property, unless you want strangers wandering in off the street!
Architect: Frédérique Legon Pyra   The theatrical entryway. A wide pivot door spins an elaborate first impression between two gorgeous palm trees on this property. Angular windows have been cut out of a concrete walled courtyard between. A circular pool is set centrestage to playfully disrupt the walkway.
Architect: Word Of Mouth   Interlace concrete and wood. The climb to this amazing elevated design looks steep with its deep concrete steps, but timber treads in between make the ascent easy work. Feathery grasses soften the edges of the concrete staircase and assist to the lightweight appearance of the main volume. Wood slat walls attractively shroud a covered porch.
Architect: JC Architecture   Make a bright colourful statement with your front door, even if there is not one single splash of another colour on, or in, the property. This simple change is tried and proven to add a positive burst of curbside appeal.
Architect: Greenbox Design   Assemble an indoor atmosphere to feel at home before you’re even through the front door.
Visualizer: Bezmirno Architects   Dark and delicious. Dark grey stone, deep stained wood slats and wood facing come together to make a sophisticated front door entrance. Full house tour here.
Visualizer: Bezmirno Architects   Use the landscape. The bordering wall of this property is sliced through with transparent sections to reveal beautiful tree filled land beyond. An outdoor bench sets out a spot to enjoy the viewpoint.
Photographer: Mathieu Fiol   A long approach is a place to play. Water features, flower planters and palm trees make this home looks like a party and we’re only on the front door step. The mind boggles at what might await inside!
Designer: Scott Lewis Landscape Architecture   Low key but aglow with lanterns. This looks like a place where they always keep the home fires burning and fresh tea in the pot.
Recommended Reading:  50 Modern Front Door Designs 40 Unique Door Knockers To Add Drama To Your Entryway 30 Funny Doormats To Give Your Guests A Humorous Welcome
Related Posts:
50 Modern Front Door Designs
Giorgio Armani Kitchen from Milan Furniture Fair 2009
Karim Rashid Door Prints
30 Funny Doormats To Give Your Guests A Humorous Welcome
Foyer Design, Decorating Tips and Pictures
Adding Life to the Living Room
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drewebowden66 · 5 years ago
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51 Fantastic Front Door Entrance Ideas With Tips To Help You Design Yours
You only get one chance to make a good first impression, so why wouldn’t you make your front door entrance the absolute best it can be? These 51 front door entrance ideas each welcome you with a high-end “hello”, which sets the tone of what’s to come. You’ll find a multitude of unique designs here, which build fabulous first impressions through use of outdoor lighting, creative landscaping, concrete overhangs, cutaway canopies, art sculpture, water features, contrasting materials, and picture-perfect pathways. We take a look at secretive entryways that build anticipation, a number of wide open glass door entrances, grand double front doors, and ultra contemporary pivot front door designs.
Visualizer: Bezmirno Architects   Conjure mystique. Our first front door entranceway leads into an interim courtyard, which builds a sense of peace and tranquility upon the short journey into the house. Stair lights glow mysteriously from under the treads to build anticipation.
Architect: Sanjay Puri Architects   Open out a narrow walkway. Picture windows reveal snap shots of the house interior all along this narrow home entrance. Uplighters illuminate green borders, pushing out the sides of the stepping stone and pebble pathway. Full house tour here.
Photographer: Lance Gerber   Inspiration from Japan. Japanese inspired screen doors reveal hints of a zen courtyard through black lattice, allowing one green space to link to the next.
Architect: RAW Architecture   A different take on the Japanese Shoji inspired entrance.
Architect: Base Architecture   Visualizer: Zmicier Maslouski   Natural meets modern. These rugged stone walls make wonderfully cooling contrast with a golden wood frame front door. A white path and white concrete roof slice cleanly between the dark grey masses.
Architect: MW Works   Nothing to hide. This modern glass wall home has a clear glass front door entrance to match, so there’ll be no hiding from door-to-door salesmen or unexpected in-laws!
Architect: Dada & Partners   Build perceived status with elegant statues. A collection of art sculptures adorn this home entrance, elevating and dramatising the approach. They make a perfect introduction to a house filled with more masterpieces.
Architect: Ramon Esteve Estudio   Capture sunlight with cutaways. The concrete overhang over this home entryway features a deep cutaway so that sunlight hits indirectly, creating light play. Full house tour here.
Architect: Barella Arquitectura   Cutaways also allow sunlight hungry plants to be enriched when planted deep within covered doorways.
Architect: Di Frenna Arquitectos   Add your personal stamp with a huge house number. This one stands out elegantly on a pure white home exterior, where decorative concrete blocks form a lace-like panel over a natural timber front door. Full house tour here.
Visualizer: TOT Render   Nestled in the trees. The overhang on this front door entrance is part concrete, part tree, as the two bridge to form one picturesque canopy.
Architect: BZP Arquitetura   Full height floor to ceiling doors. This front door has no containing upper or lower framework, giving the entranceway seamless grandeur.
Architect: George Smart   Designer: Curiel Arquitectos   Build balance with surroundings. Two trees flank this home’s front entrance, so a double front door design has been selected to compliment the twin tree trunks.
Architect: Tom Meaney Architect   Another perfectly balanced front door entrance, this time with twin trees, benches and wall sconces.
Architect: Cuppett Architects   Wood adds a wealth of warmth to monochrome home exteriors. This cool stone and black powder coated metal architecture becomes infinitely more welcoming with the rich timber addition.
Visualizer: Mai Dũng   Water features add wow factor, atmospheric sound and captivating movement. This one is lit up with outdoor lighting too, so that it can also be admired at night.
Visualizer: Lv Xiaobin   Broader bodies of water give a home entrance a floating effect.
Visualizer: Vizforge   Layered canopies provide shaded walkways out of the burning sun, a pleasant welcome in hot climates.
Designer: Ludwig Mies van der Rohe   Stage it. From the iconic Farnsworth House, this tall staircase entrance has been split in half with a large concrete platform placed between–almost like an outdoor stage.
Architect: Lagula Architects   Cut a sweeping entrance with a curved canopy. This one has a circular skylight to elaborate on the curvaceous theme.
Visualizer: Fathy Ibrahim   Match up the metalwork. This wood slatted front door is flanked by chic outdoor wall sconces that complement the dark silhouette of its black metal bar handle.
Visualizer: TAFF Arquitectos   The linear look. The horizontal timber boards of this modern door design complement the shallow steps that lead to it, and the staircase that climbs to the rear entrance. Fins fashioned into the side of the concrete façade elevate the linear aesthetic.
Designer: Abin Design Studio   L-shaped steps carve out the opportunity for a long and deep planter by the doorway.
Architect: MW Works   The indirect approach. Lay slabs that meander rather than direct, like a mini path of discovery.
Architect: Ames Peterson   Another take on the indirect approach.
Designer: Kym Rodger Design   Whether you have space for planters or not, greenery can grow a welcoming touch. Plant a vertical garden full of different leaf sizes for a deeply textured garden wall that looks like a living work of art.
Designer: Mark Tessier   Romance isn’t dead. Even an ultra modern front door can be given a touch of traditional whimsy and romance by adding a floral arch.
Source: McKimm   Wide steps have dormant potential as concrete planters. Hollow out about half of each step to plant a picture-perfect pathway of slow growing shrubs.
Designer: Unknown   For retro-fit wow factor, erect a pergola over the front entrance. Extend it with a carport for added usability.
Architect: CUBYC arсhitects   Visualizer: Inviz   Peaceful and perfect. Accentuate a crisp minimalist home entrance with perimeter lighting.
Architect: Celso Laetano Arquitetura   Let nature take centre stage, like this fantastic mature tree. A wood front door and wooden garage shutters complement the bark.
Architect: Tate Studio Architects   More beautiful traditional Japanese inspiration, this time from a large zen garden.
Architect: Tate Studio Architects   An arid garden shapes this front entrance, planted with spiky succulents and uniform rows of round cacti. Large paving slabs vibe with a wide slab-like front door design.
Architect: Coates Design   An elbow canopy constructs a sense of intimacy from an angled approach.
Architect: South Coast Architects   A sweeping pathway presents opportunity for shapely plant beds. Turf fillers draw emerald outlines.
Architect: Tim Stewart Architects   Craft a wood slat feature wall to create wondrous height.
Architect: Choeff Levy Fischman   People are intrinsically drawn to waterfalls, and this seven foot water feature has stunning allure by a floating pathway. Note how the front door timber and wood siding horizontally contrast with the fall.
Architect: Richard Cole Architecture   A wood ceiling creates a comforting sense of already being indoors.
Visualizer: Deraya Designs   Play with solid volumes and voids, like this concrete picture frame courtyard.
Architect: Luigi Rosselli Architects   Cluster families of modern outdoor planters in varying heights. Use architectural plants to create shape, and differering leaf colours for interest. Here, green and red foliage rest darkly against white on white front door and entryway decor.
Designer: Masonry Design   Generate character in a modern setting. This fabulous three-piece shuttered front door design sets a scene strength and charm at the same time. Large bowl planters flank either side of the concrete stoop, alive with tiny pricks of intense red flowers.
Architect: SCDA Architects   Photographer: Seth Powers   The faux giant front door. Get the look of a grand door without the extra weight and hinge size by cutting a small door within a matching surround. Timber planks do a great job of disguising the joins.
Sliding glass doors allow the house to stand open to the garden in a welcoming indoor-outdoor living style… Exclusively suited to those who live on a gated property, unless you want strangers wandering in off the street!
Architect: Frédérique Legon Pyra   The theatrical entryway. A wide pivot door spins an elaborate first impression between two gorgeous palm trees on this property. Angular windows have been cut out of a concrete walled courtyard between. A circular pool is set centrestage to playfully disrupt the walkway.
Architect: Word Of Mouth   Interlace concrete and wood. The climb to this amazing elevated design looks steep with its deep concrete steps, but timber treads in between make the ascent easy work. Feathery grasses soften the edges of the concrete staircase and assist to the lightweight appearance of the main volume. Wood slat walls attractively shroud a covered porch.
Architect: JC Architecture   Make a bright colourful statement with your front door, even if there is not one single splash of another colour on, or in, the property. This simple change is tried and proven to add a positive burst of curbside appeal.
Architect: Greenbox Design   Assemble an indoor atmosphere to feel at home before you’re even through the front door.
Visualizer: Bezmirno Architects   Dark and delicious. Dark grey stone, deep stained wood slats and wood facing come together to make a sophisticated front door entrance. Full house tour here.
Visualizer: Bezmirno Architects   Use the landscape. The bordering wall of this property is sliced through with transparent sections to reveal beautiful tree filled land beyond. An outdoor bench sets out a spot to enjoy the viewpoint.
Photographer: Mathieu Fiol   A long approach is a place to play. Water features, flower planters and palm trees make this home looks like a party and we’re only on the front door step. The mind boggles at what might await inside!
Designer: Scott Lewis Landscape Architecture   Low key but aglow with lanterns. This looks like a place where they always keep the home fires burning and fresh tea in the pot.
Recommended Reading:  50 Modern Front Door Designs 40 Unique Door Knockers To Add Drama To Your Entryway 30 Funny Doormats To Give Your Guests A Humorous Welcome
Related Posts:
50 Modern Front Door Designs
Giorgio Armani Kitchen from Milan Furniture Fair 2009
Karim Rashid Door Prints
30 Funny Doormats To Give Your Guests A Humorous Welcome
Foyer Design, Decorating Tips and Pictures
Adding Life to the Living Room
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biofunmy · 5 years ago
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$450,000 Homes in Oklahoma, Massachusetts and Ohio
Tulsa, Okla. | $450,000
A 1950 ranch house with three bedrooms and two bathrooms
This stucco-and-wood-sided house is about 10 minutes from downtown, in a neighborhood dominated by midcentury ranches and large, mature trees. Gathering Place, a planned 100-acre park, more than half of which opened last year, is five miles northwest. Brookside district on South Peoria Avenue, which has a concentration of boutiques and restaurants, is about three miles west.
Size: 2,269 square feet
Price per square foot: $198
Indoors: A pair of glass doors in a high fence offers a private gateway to the property. Crossing a landscaped front patio, you enter a glassed-in wraparound corridor that flows into an open-plan living area with wood floors and a wood-burning fireplace flanked by built-in minimalist bookshelves with integrated lighting. To the left is a kitchen, separated by a peninsula, with soft-close cabinetry, quartz countertops and stainless-steel appliances. To the right is a dining area with concrete floors, a vaulted ceiling and a wall of windows.
The three bedrooms include a master with open beams supporting a vaulted ceiling, a fireplace, a walk-in closet and a hot-pink en suite bathroom with double quartz sinks, a walk-in shower and a soaking tub. The two guest bedrooms have access to a bathroom with glass subway tile and a walk-in shower.
Outdoor space: The 0.33-acre property includes a fenced backyard with a sculpture garden, a firepit and a trellis-roofed patio off the kitchen. There is also a detached two-car garage.
Taxes: $6,035 (2018, based on a $43,945 assessment)
Contact: Cherie A. French, Chinowth & Cohen Realtors, 918-951-6161; cfrench.cctulsa.com
Shelburne Falls, Mass. | $435,000
An 1868 Gothic Revival house with five bedrooms and two bathrooms
The owner, a photographer who is also the listing agent, bought this house in 1982 and spent several decades restoring it, even marrying the man she hired to paint six colors on the exterior. Built as a summer home for a dentist in Springfield, Mass., about 50 miles southeast, it has been featured in several shelter magazines as well as on HGTV. It is within walking distance of the village’s commercial center.
Shelburne Falls, a village of 1,700 people, is on the Mohawk Trail, in the foothills of the Berkshires, two hours northwest of Boston and a half-hour southwest of Brattleboro, Vt. Bradley International Airport is about an hour south. The village has a bridge built for trolleys, known as the Bridge of Flowers, and a small bowling alley. The local drugstore still has its original soda fountain.
Size: 3,900 square feet
Price per square foot: $112
Indoors: The twin-gabled house has a rear addition and, beyond that, an attached barn with a workshop on the lower floor and an 800-square-foot studio upstairs, with heat, electricity and a loading ramp.
The entry hall of the main house, with its striped-wood flooring and hand-screened reproduction period wallpaper, opens on either side to a parlor with hardwood floors and an original coal-burning fireplace with painted stone mantels. The newly wallpapered dining room, which dates to the early 20th century, has striped floors, walls trimmed with Tudor-style molding and a working fireplace with a mantel more suggestive of Arts and Crafts than the Victorian era.
The owner renovated the kitchen when she bought the property; it has wood cabinets, decorative tile, vinyl flooring and a glass-faced wood stove. A separate breakfast room has a large bay window. Next to it is a family room with a closet that could be used as a downstairs bedroom. A bathroom with a toilet, sink and shower stall is off the kitchen.
The four upstairs bedrooms include a pair of rooms at the front with arched windows and a smaller pair at the back, each with one arched window and an original stained-glass pane.
All of the non-decorative windows were recently replaced and have tilt mechanisms that allow them to be cleaned easily. Two rooms were combined in the renovation of the 232-square-foot upstairs bathroom, which has a pedestal sink and jetted soaking tub.
Outdoor space: The house has rocking-chair porches in front and on the side. Features of the 2.02-acre property include a spring-fed pond, two gazebos, a tiny footbridge over a stream and a tool shed shaped like a miniature Victorian house.
Taxes: $5,395
Contact: Harriet Paine, Cohn & Company Real Estate, 413-475-4203; cohnandcompany.com
Columbus, Ohio | $448,000
A 1926 brick Tudor Revival house with five bedrooms and two and a half bathrooms
This property, in the Clintonville neighborhood, consists of the original 1926 house of about 1,000 square feet and a 1970 addition almost twice that size. The first owners clearly intended to expand, adding an exterior door on the second floor that opened to empty space. The doorway currently overlooks the addition’s great room.
This house has been in the family of the current owners since 1963. It is less than three blocks from North High Street, a local business district, and a few minutes west of Interstate 71, which leads directly to downtown, seven miles south. Ohio State University’s campus is about four miles southwest.
Size: 2,877 square feet
Price per square foot: $156
Indoors: Passing through the arched doorway of the original house, you enter a hallway with patterned wood floors and a simple wood staircase and trim. To the right is a parlor with a full wall of wood built-ins surrounding a brick fireplace. Both this room and the six-sided dining room beyond it have parquet floors and casement windows with multiple panes.
The kitchen lies straight ahead of the front door and also connects to the dining room. Shaped like a galley, it has wood cabinets, granite countertops, a stainless-steel subway-tile backsplash and stainless-steel appliances (a new oven is on order). The kitchen opens to the 400-square-foot great room, with its 15-foot peaked ceiling and rustic oak beams.
A wing off the great room includes three bedrooms with beamed timber ceilings and a bathroom with a walk-in shower. One bedroom opens to a hundred-square-foot four-season room, where tropical plants were grown.
The second floor has two bedrooms and a full hallway bathroom. One bedroom overlooks the great room; the brass cranks remain on the windows facing the addition. The other bedroom has an en suite half bathroom.
Outdoor space: The house is built on a hill and overlooks a ravine. The 0.68-acre property, unusually large for the area, has woodland plants and a venerable lilac tree. A screened porch off the great room opens to a wood deck, which is also accessible from the four-season room. The fenced yard slopes down to a creek bed. Wildlife sighted nearby include hawks, owls and deer.
The attached two-car garage below the great room is heated and has doors facing the front and back of the property. It is reached through the basement.
Taxes: $8,949
Contact: Shelley Davis, Coldwell Banker King Thompson, 740-816-0358; coldwellbankerhomes.com
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Blackened Wood House Covers This particular New Home In Ma
Blackened Wood House Covers This particular New Home In Ma
Blackened Wooden Siding Addresses This Brand new House Within Massachusetts | CONTEMPORIST
Photography simply by David Sundberg
Architecture & design company Schiller Tasks have worked with with Grey Organschi Architecture to design the particular recently finished Chilmark Home, located in Martha’s Vineyard, Ma.
Digital photography by Brian Sundberg
The home, which usually sits upon 4. twenty 5 acres, overlooks the sea and it is surrounded simply by farmland. Top of the floor of the house has immediate access to the landscaped yard through angled stairways.
Photography simply by David Sundberg
Most of the different areas of the home, like the family room upstairs as well as the bedrooms downstairs, all possess floor-to-ceiling slipping glass doors and windows.
Photography simply by David Sundberg
Shou Sugi Prohibit or blackened cedar wooden siding, addresses the house plus garage. On arriving at the home, you see that this garage as well as the house are usually split, having a pathway involving the 2. A property office along with views from the water rests above the particular garage and may be achieved via a group of stairs on the outside of the garage area.
Photography simply by David Sundberg
The particular entry towards the main home is a wooden ramp that will runs in the garage plus alongside the rear of the house. A light wood entry way welcomes you to definitely the home.
Digital photography by Brian Sundberg
Upon getting into the home, a person walk into the primary living plus dining room. Within the dining room, a huge hand-carved wooden table using a minimalist chandelier has lots of room to a family event and visitors.
Photography simply by David Sundberg
The particular dining room leads to to a big deck plus outdoor table. Decorative necklace lights appear to be an art set up during the day that a fun environment at night. An area of the porch above the particular table will be covered to allow year-round outside entertaining.
Pictures by Brian Sundberg
Back within and next towards the dining room could be the living room. Big sliding cup windows that will meet in the corner, that could be opened to savor an afternoon air flow, and on an awesome night, a fire can be lighted to add warmness.
Photography simply by David Sundberg
On the other hand of the table and saved between wall space is a wooden ships step ladder.
Photography simply by David Sundberg
Towards the top of the step ladder, there’s the cozy press room along with plenty of bvnvbn and built/in seating with a lot of pillows. For the opposite aspect of the little room is really a wood along with sections cut-out for shelves and to home the television.
Picture taking by Jesse Sundberg
Back down to the main amount of the house is really a small space with seats, a large home window and built/in white shelves and storage space.
Photography simply by David Sundberg
Furthermore on the major floor of the house is the cooking area with contemporary matte cupboards and a curled island along with space designed for seating. A huge picture screen perfectly structures the watch.
Photography simply by David Sundberg
Reverse the tropical isle is a built/in seating corner with a little bench.
Pictures by Jesse Sundberg
A moderate palate associated with bleached lung burning ash planking plus bleached plywood has been utilized throughout the inside of the home.
Digital photography by Brian Sundberg
Heading downstairs, the roof contrasts the particular board shaped concrete wall structure, the gently colored stairways and the white-colored hallway.
Picture taking by Brian Sundberg
Another residing area is situated at the bottom from the stairs, and yes it opens up straight to the yard.
Photography simply by David Sundberg
Furthermore on this degree of the home would be the bedrooms. This particular bedroom offers kept the particular concrete wall structure in its organic state, plus it’s melted by the use of greyish curtains. Jumps of heavy red give a touch associated with color towards the bedroom.
Pictures by Brian Sundberg
In an additional of the sleeping rooms, 2 bedrooms separated simply by nightstands, possess tree sights and immediate access to the backyard.
Photography simply by David Sundberg
Here is a look at among the bathrooms, this too includes a sliding doorway to the outdoors. Colorful glowing blue patterned ceramic tiles have been utilized to highlight the particular bath plus add some colour to the area.
Photography simply by David Sundberg
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Source:
http://www.interiordesign2014.com/architecture/blackened-wood-house-covers-this-particular-new-home-in-ma/
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