Kleine Häuser mit Misch-Dachdeckung Ideen und Design
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Xavier Design Group
Kleines, Einstöckiges Mediterranes Einfamilienhaus mit beiger Fassadenfarbe, Flachdach und Misch-Dachdeckung in Los Angeles
Homeworks of Alabama, Inc
Tristan Cairnes
Kleines, Einstöckiges Landhaus Einfamilienhaus mit Betonfassade, weißer Fassadenfarbe und Misch-Dachdeckung in Atlanta
Kleines, Einstöckiges Landhaus Einfamilienhaus mit Betonfassade, weißer Fassadenfarbe und Misch-Dachdeckung in Atlanta
Noel Cross+Architects
Gina Viscusi Elson - Interior Designer
Kathryn Strickland - Landscape Architect
Meschi Construction - General Contractor
Michael Hospelt - Photographer
Lands End Development - Designers & Builders
Kleines, Dreistöckiges Nordisches Einfamilienhaus mit bunter Fassadenfarbe, Satteldach und Misch-Dachdeckung in Minneapolis
Duke Homes, Inc.
Form and function meld in this smaller footprint ranch home perfect for empty nesters or young families.
Kleines, Einstöckiges Modernes Einfamilienhaus mit Mix-Fassade, brauner Fassadenfarbe, Schmetterlingsdach, Misch-Dachdeckung, braunem Dach und Wandpaneelen in Indianapolis
Kleines, Einstöckiges Modernes Einfamilienhaus mit Mix-Fassade, brauner Fassadenfarbe, Schmetterlingsdach, Misch-Dachdeckung, braunem Dach und Wandpaneelen in Indianapolis
Workshop No. 5
Kleines, Zweistöckiges Modernes Einfamilienhaus mit Backsteinfassade, grauer Fassadenfarbe, Schmetterlingsdach, Misch-Dachdeckung, grauem Dach und Verschalung in Austin
form:form architects
Our ’Corten Extension’ project; new open plan kitchen-diner as part of a side-return and rear single storey extension and remodel to a Victorian terrace. The Corten blends in beautifully with the existing brick whilst the plan form kicks out towards the garden to create a small sheltered seating area.
Helios Design Group
Our clients wanted a very contemporary addition to their historical brick house. we added a glass box with floor to ceiling windows - the dining table sits in the corner overlooking the view.
photo: Cody O'Laughlin
Tiezzi Construction, LLC
Entertaining, relaxing and enjoying life…this spectacular pool house sits on the water’s edge, built on piers and takes full advantage of Long Island Sound views. An infinity pool with hot tub and trellis with a built in misting system to keep everyone cool and relaxed all summer long!
Visbeen Architects
This cozy lake cottage skillfully incorporates a number of features that would normally be restricted to a larger home design. A glance of the exterior reveals a simple story and a half gable running the length of the home, enveloping the majority of the interior spaces. To the rear, a pair of gables with copper roofing flanks a covered dining area that connects to a screened porch. Inside, a linear foyer reveals a generous staircase with cascading landing. Further back, a centrally placed kitchen is connected to all of the other main level entertaining spaces through expansive cased openings. A private study serves as the perfect buffer between the homes master suite and living room. Despite its small footprint, the master suite manages to incorporate several closets, built-ins, and adjacent master bath complete with a soaker tub flanked by separate enclosures for shower and water closet. Upstairs, a generous double vanity bathroom is shared by a bunkroom, exercise space, and private bedroom. The bunkroom is configured to provide sleeping accommodations for up to 4 people. The rear facing exercise has great views of the rear yard through a set of windows that overlook the copper roof of the screened porch below.
Builder: DeVries & Onderlinde Builders
Interior Designer: Vision Interiors by Visbeen
Photographer: Ashley Avila Photography
Nakamoto Forestry
Project Overview:
This modern ADU build was designed by Wittman Estes Architecture + Landscape and pre-fab tech builder NODE. Our Gendai siding with an Amber oil finish clads the exterior. Featured in Dwell, Designmilk and other online architectural publications, this tiny project packs a punch with affordable design and a focus on sustainability.
This modern ADU build was designed by Wittman Estes Architecture + Landscape and pre-fab tech builder NODE. Our shou sugi ban Gendai siding with a clear alkyd finish clads the exterior. Featured in Dwell, Designmilk and other online architectural publications, this tiny project packs a punch with affordable design and a focus on sustainability.
“A Seattle homeowner hired Wittman Estes to design an affordable, eco-friendly unit to live in her backyard as a way to generate rental income. The modern structure is outfitted with a solar roof that provides all of the energy needed to power the unit and the main house. To make it happen, the firm partnered with NODE, known for their design-focused, carbon negative, non-toxic homes, resulting in Seattle’s first DADU (Detached Accessory Dwelling Unit) with the International Living Future Institute’s (IFLI) zero energy certification.”
Product: Gendai 1×6 select grade shiplap
Prefinish: Amber
Application: Residential – Exterior
SF: 350SF
Designer: Wittman Estes, NODE
Builder: NODE, Don Bunnell
Date: November 2018
Location: Seattle, WA
Photos courtesy of: Andrew Pogue
Marià Castelló, Architecture
Can Xomeu Rita es una pequeña vivienda que toma el nombre de la finca tradicional del interior de la isla de Formentera donde se emplaza. Su ubicación en el territorio responde a un claro libre de vegetación cercano al campo de trigo y avena existente en la parcela, donde la alineación con las trazas de los muros de piedra seca existentes coincide con la buena orientación hacia el Sur así como con un área adecuada para recuperar el agua de lluvia en un aljibe.
La sencillez del programa se refleja en la planta mediante tres franjas que van desde la parte más pública orientada al Sur con el acceso y las mejores visuales desde el porche ligero, hasta la zona de noche en la parte norte donde los dormitorios se abren hacia levante y poniente. En la franja central queda un espacio diáfano de relación, cocina y comedor.
El diseño bioclimático de la vivienda se fundamenta en el hecho de aprovechar la ventilación cruzada en el interior para garantizar un ambiente fresco durante los meses de verano, gracias a haber analizado los vientos dominantes. Del mismo modo la profundidad del porche se ha dimensionado para que permita los aportes de radiación solar en el interior durante el invierno y, en cambio, genere sombra y frescor en la temporada estival.
El bajo presupuesto con que contaba la intervención se manifiesta también en la tectónica del edificio, que muestra sinceramente cómo ha sido construido. Termoarcilla, madera de pino, piedra caliza y morteros de cal permanecen vistos como acabados conformando soluciones constructivas transpirables que aportan más calidez, confort y salud al hogar.
cedar street builders
Kleines, Einstöckiges Uriges Einfamilienhaus mit Faserzement-Fassade, pinker Fassadenfarbe, Misch-Dachdeckung und grauem Dach in Indianapolis
Nakamoto Forestry
Project Overview:
This modern ADU build was designed by Wittman Estes Architecture + Landscape and pre-fab tech builder NODE. Our Gendai siding with an Amber oil finish clads the exterior. Featured in Dwell, Designmilk and other online architectural publications, this tiny project packs a punch with affordable design and a focus on sustainability.
This modern ADU build was designed by Wittman Estes Architecture + Landscape and pre-fab tech builder NODE. Our shou sugi ban Gendai siding with a clear alkyd finish clads the exterior. Featured in Dwell, Designmilk and other online architectural publications, this tiny project packs a punch with affordable design and a focus on sustainability.
“A Seattle homeowner hired Wittman Estes to design an affordable, eco-friendly unit to live in her backyard as a way to generate rental income. The modern structure is outfitted with a solar roof that provides all of the energy needed to power the unit and the main house. To make it happen, the firm partnered with NODE, known for their design-focused, carbon negative, non-toxic homes, resulting in Seattle’s first DADU (Detached Accessory Dwelling Unit) with the International Living Future Institute’s (IFLI) zero energy certification.”
Product: Gendai 1×6 select grade shiplap
Prefinish: Amber
Application: Residential – Exterior
SF: 350SF
Designer: Wittman Estes, NODE
Builder: NODE, Don Bunnell
Date: November 2018
Location: Seattle, WA
Photos courtesy of: Andrew Pogue
Ecospace Italia
Kleines, Einstöckiges Modernes Haus mit grauer Fassadenfarbe, Pultdach und Misch-Dachdeckung in Sonstige
Gary Keith Jackson Design Inc.
Modern Farmhouse
Kleines, Einstöckiges Country Einfamilienhaus mit Mix-Fassade, weißer Fassadenfarbe, Satteldach und Misch-Dachdeckung in Houston
Kleines, Einstöckiges Country Einfamilienhaus mit Mix-Fassade, weißer Fassadenfarbe, Satteldach und Misch-Dachdeckung in Houston
HighCube Homes Ltd
A stunning compact one bedroom annex shipping container home.
The perfect choice for a first time buyer, offering a truly affordable way to build their very own first home, or alternatively, the H1 would serve perfectly as a retirement home to keep loved ones close, but allow them to retain a sense of independence.
Features included with H1 are:
Master bedroom with fitted wardrobes.
Master shower room with full size walk-in shower enclosure, storage, modern WC and wash basin.
Open plan kitchen, dining, and living room, with large glass bi-folding doors.
DIMENSIONS: 12.5m x 2.8m footprint (approx.)
LIVING SPACE: 27 SqM (approx.)
PRICE: £49,000 (for basic model shown)
PureBuild Inc.
Exposed wood lintel over entry door in rammed earth house.
Kleines, Einstöckiges Mediterranes Einfamilienhaus mit Lehmfassade, blauer Fassadenfarbe und Misch-Dachdeckung in Sonstige
Kleines, Einstöckiges Mediterranes Einfamilienhaus mit Lehmfassade, blauer Fassadenfarbe und Misch-Dachdeckung in Sonstige
Lisa Breeze Architect
Built by Neverstop Group + Photograph by Caitlin Mills +
Styling by Natalie James
Kleines, Einstöckiges Modernes Haus mit beiger Fassadenfarbe, Misch-Dachdeckung und Satteldach in Melbourne
Kleines, Einstöckiges Modernes Haus mit beiger Fassadenfarbe, Misch-Dachdeckung und Satteldach in Melbourne
Brooks + Scarpa Architects
Located in a neighborhood characterized by traditional bungalow style single-family residences, Orange Grove is a new landmark for the City of West Hollywood. The building is sensitively designed and compatible with the neighborhood, but differs in material palette and scale from its neighbors. Referencing architectural conventions of modernism rather than the pitched roof forms of traditional domesticity, the project presents a characteristic that is consistent with the eclectic and often unconventional demographic of West Hollywood. Distinct from neighboring structures, the building creates a strong relationship to the street by virtue of its large amount of highly usable balcony area in the front façade.
While there are dramatic and larger scale elements that define the building, it is also broken down into comprehensible human scale parts, and is itself broken down into two different buildings. Orange Grove displays a similar kind of iconoclasm as the Schindler House, an icon of California modernism, located a short distance away. Like the Schindler House, the conventional architectural elements of windows and porches become part of an abstract sculptural ensemble. At the Schindler House, windows are found in the gaps between structural concrete wall panels. At Orange Grove, windows are inserted in gaps between different sections of the building.
The design of Orange Grove is generated by a subtle balance of tensions. Building volumes and the placement of windows, doors and balconies are not static but rather constitute an active three-dimensional composition in motion. Each piece of the building is a strong and clearly defined shape, such as the corrugated metal surround that encloses the second story balcony in the east and north facades. Another example of this clear delineation is the use of two square profile balcony surrounds in the front façade that set up a dialogue between them—one is small, the other large, one is open at the front, the other is veiled with stainless steel slats. At the same time each balcony is balanced and related to other elements in the building, the smaller one to the driveway gate below and the other to the roll-up door and first floor balcony. Each building element is intended to read as an abstract form in itself—such as a window becoming a slit or windows becoming a framed box, while also becoming part of a larger whole. Although this building may not mirror the status quo it answers to the desires of consumers in a burgeoning niche market who want large, simple interior volumes of space, and a paradigm based on space, light and industrial materials of the loft rather than the bungalow.
Kleine Häuser mit Misch-Dachdeckung Ideen und Design
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