Wohnzimmer in Weiß Ideen und Bilder
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Amy Storm & Company
Großes, Offenes Klassisches Wohnzimmer mit grauer Wandfarbe, hellem Holzboden, Kamin, gefliester Kaminumrandung, Multimediawand und braunem Boden in Chicago
DeBaker Design Group, Ltd.
The Family Room and Breakfast Nook made up the bulk of the additional for this project. There is also a Covered Porch on the back side of the Family Room.
Divco Custom Homes
Maritimes Wohnzimmer mit weißer Wandfarbe, hellem Holzboden, Gaskamin, Kaminumrandung aus Stein und TV-Wand in Miami
German Kitchen Center
Offenes Modernes Wohnzimmer mit weißer Wandfarbe, hellem Holzboden und Gaskamin in New York
Patterson Custom Homes
Offenes Mid-Century Wohnzimmer mit weißer Wandfarbe, hellem Holzboden und Gaskamin in Los Angeles
GeorgieRose Interior Design
Contemproary lounge design with luxury pieces, commissioned artwork and modern touches
Mittelgroßes Modernes Wohnzimmer mit weißer Wandfarbe und Keramikboden in Gloucestershire
Mittelgroßes Modernes Wohnzimmer mit weißer Wandfarbe und Keramikboden in Gloucestershire
Hamilton Architects
Mittelgroßes, Offenes Country Wohnzimmer mit weißer Wandfarbe, hellem Holzboden und Gaskamin in Los Angeles
Payton Addison
White Cloud sectional with Industrial metal bookcase and vintage farmhouse accents
Großes, Offenes Country Wohnzimmer mit weißer Wandfarbe, braunem Holzboden, TV-Wand und braunem Boden in Orange County
Großes, Offenes Country Wohnzimmer mit weißer Wandfarbe, braunem Holzboden, TV-Wand und braunem Boden in Orange County
House Sprucing
Großes, Fernseherloses, Offenes Landhaus Wohnzimmer mit grauer Wandfarbe, braunem Holzboden, Kamin, Kaminumrandung aus Stein und braunem Boden in Dallas
Christophe Lux Design
Dans le quartier St-Jacques à Paris, le client m'a donné Carte Blanche pour transformer un local pro de stockage en un studio meublé de 25 m2.
J'ai donc choisi de faire un appartement avec beaucoup de rangements intégrés et avec quelques astuces : un mini-bureau accolé au dressing, une niche en guise d'assise, une petite verrière sur un meuble s'ouvrant des 2 côtés et cloisonnant discrètement la cuisine et le séjour-chambre.
Tout ça dans une décoration très végétale, aux teintes bois, blanc, bleu et vert, grâce à un joli papier peint.
Une pièce tout-en-un : séjour, chambre, dressing, bureau
Lisa Fleming Design
Klassisches Wohnzimmer mit weißer Wandfarbe, dunklem Holzboden, Kamin und TV-Wand in New York
Rande Leaman Interior Design
The front room is used primarily as a sitting room/reading room by our clients. Four upholstered chairs in a teal blue velvet surround a wood and iron table. A window seat is covered in a navy blue faux linen, with pillows of varying hues of blue. This is a perfect spot for morning coffee and reading the paper!
Glenna Stone Interior Design
Großes, Offenes Maritimes Wohnzimmer mit beiger Wandfarbe, dunklem Holzboden und braunem Boden in Philadelphia
John McClain Design
Klassisches Wohnzimmer mit weißer Wandfarbe, braunem Holzboden, Kamin, Kaminumrandung aus Stein, TV-Wand und braunem Boden in Los Angeles
User
The open space plan on the main level of the Prairie Style home is deceiving of the actual separation of spaces. This home packs a punch with a private hot tub, craft room, library, and even a theater. The interior of the home features the same attention to place, as the natural world is evident in the use of granite, basalt, walnut, poplar, and natural river rock throughout. Floor to ceiling windows in strategic locations eliminates the sense of compression on the interior, while the overall window design promotes natural daylighting and cross-ventilation in nearly every space of the home.
Glo’s A5 Series in double pane was selected for the high performance values and clean, minimal frame profiles. High performance spacers, double pane glass, multiple air seals, and a larger continuous thermal break combine to reduce convection and eliminate condensation, ultimately providing energy efficiency and thermal performance unheard of in traditional aluminum windows. The A5 Series provides smooth operation and long-lasting durability without sacrificing style for this Prairie Style home.
Croft Architecture
In Brief
Our client has occupied their mid-19th Century farm house in a small attractive village in Staffordshire for many years. As the family has grown and developed, their lifestyles and living patterns have changed. Although the existing property is particularly generous in terms of size and space, the family circumstances had changed, and they needed extra living space to accommodate older members of their family.
The layout and shape of the farm house’s living accommodation didn’t provide the functional space for everyday modern family life. Their kitchen is located at the far end of the house, and, in fact it is furthest ground floor room away from the garden. This proves challenging for the family during the warmer, sunnier months when they wish to spend more time eating and drinking outdoors. The only access they have to the garden is from a gate at the rear of the property. The quickest way to get there is through the back door which leads onto their rear driveway. The family virtually need to scale the perimeter of the house to access their garden.
The family would also like to comfortably welcome additional older family members to the household. Although their relatives want the security of being within the family hub they also want their own space, privacy and independence from the core of the family.
We were appointed by our client to help them create a design solution that responds to the needs of the family, for now, and into the foreseeable future.
In Context
To the rear of the farmhouse our clients had still retained the red bricked historic bake house and granary barn. The family wanted to maximise the potential of the redundant building by converting it into a separate annex to accommodate their older relatives. They also sought a solution to accessing the back garden from the farmhouse.
Our clients enjoy being in the garden and would like to be able to easily spend more time outside. The barn offers an ideal use of vacant space from which to create additional living accommodation that’s on the ground floor, independent, private, and yet it’s easy to access the hub of the family home.
Our Approach
The client’s home is in a small village in the Staffordshire countryside, within a conservation area. Their attractive mid-19th century red bricked farmhouse occupies a prominent corner position next to the church at the entrance to High Street. Its former farm buildings and yard have been sold for residential conversion and redevelopment but to the rear the farmhouse still retains its historic bake house with granary above.
The barn is a two-storey red brick building with a clay tiled roof and the upper floor can still accessed by an external flight of stone steps. Over the years the bake house has only been used by the family for storage and needed some repairs. The barn's style is a great example which reflects the way that former farming activity was carried out back in the mid-19th Century.
The new living space within the barn solves three problems in one.
The empty barn provides the perfect space for developing extra en-suite, ground floor living accommodation for the family, creating additional flexible space on the first floor of the barn for the family’s hobbies.
The conversion provides a to link the main farmhouse with barn, the garden and the drive way.
It will also give a new lease of life back to the historic barn preserving and enhancing its originality.
Design Approach
Every element of the historical barns restoration was given careful consideration, to sensitively retain and restore the original character.
The property has some significant features of heritage value all lending to its historical character. For example, to the rear of the barn there is an original beehive oven.
Historical Gems
A beehive oven is a type of oven that’s been used since the Middle Ages in Europe. It gets its name from its domed shape, which resembles that of an old-fashioned beehive. The oven is an extremely rare example and is a feature that our team and our clients wanted to restore and incorporate into the new design. The conservation officer was in favour of retaining the beehive oven to preserve it for future studies.
Our clients also have a well in the front garden of the farmhouse. The old well is located exactly under the spot of the proposed new en-suite WC. We liaised with the conservation officer and they were happy for the well to be covered rather than preserved within the design. We discussed the possibility of making a feature of the well within the barn to our clients and made clear that highlighting the well would be costly in both time and money. The family had a budget and timescale to follow and they decided against incorporating the well within the new design. We ensured that the redundant well was properly assessed, before it could be infilled and capped with a reinforced concrete slab.
Another aspect of the barn that we were all keen to preserve were the external granary steps and door. They are part of the building’s significance and character; their loss would weaken the character and heritage of the old granary barn. We ensured that the steps and door should be retained and repaired within the new design. It was imperative for clients and our team to retain the historical features that form the character and history of the building. The external stone steps and granary door complement the original design indicating the buildings former working purpose within the 19th Century farm complex.
An experienced structural specialist was appointed to produce a structural report, to ensure all aspects of the building were sound prior to planning. Our team worked closely with the conservation officer to ensure that the project remained sensitive and sympathetic to the locality of the site and the existing buildings.
Access Problems Solved
Despite being in a Conservation Area, the conservation officer and the planners were happy with a seamless contemporary glazed link from the main farm to the granary barn. The new glazed link, not only brings a significant amount of light into the interior of the farmhouse, but also granary barn, creating an open and fluid area within the home, rather than it just being a corridor.
The glazed hallway provides the family with direct access from the main farmhouse to the granary barn, and it opens outdirectly onto their garden space. The link to the barn changes the way that the family currently live for the better, creating flexibility in terms of direct access to the outside space and to the granary barn.
Working Together
We worked closely with the conservation officer to ensure that our initial design for the planned scheme was befitting of its place in the Conservation Area (and suited to a historic structure). It was our intention to create a modern and refreshing space which complements the original building.
A close collaboration between the client, the conservation officer, the planners and our team has enabled us the deliver a design that retains as much of the working aesthetic of the buildings as possible. Local planners were keen to see the building converted to residential use to save it from disrepair, allowing the chance to create a unique home with significant original features, such as the beehive oven, the stone steps and the granary doors.
We have sensitively and respectfully designed the barn incorporating new architecture with a sense of the old history from the existing buildings. This allows the current work to be interpreted as an additional thread to the historical context of the buildings, without affecting their character.
The former barn has been sympathetically transformed inside and out, corresponding well with the historical significance of the immediate farm site and the local area. We’ve created a new sleek, contemporary glazed link for the family to the outside of their house, whilst developing additional living space that retains the historical core, ethos and detail of the building. In addition, the clients can also now take advantage of the unrivaled views of the church opposite, from the upper floor of the historic barn.
Feeling inspired?
Find out how we converted a Grade II LIsted Farmhouse.
Wohnzimmer in Weiß Ideen und Bilder
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