インディアナポリスのLDKのインテリア・コーディネート事例

The dining area is open to the kitchen. The kitchen island also includes seating at one end. The counters are Silestone Calypso quartz , with matching slab backsplash. Photo by Christopher Wright, CR

This open floor plan creates such a cozy feeling with the neutral hues.
Photo Credit: Tom Graham
インディアナポリスの中サイズのLDKの画像 (黄色い壁、濃色無垢フローリング、暖炉なし、茶色い床)

Photography ©2012 Tony Valainis
インディアナポリスの小さいコンテンポラリースタイルのLDKの画像 (白い壁、濃色無垢フローリング、暖炉なし)

Two years before this photo shoot, a Bloomington couple came to SYI wondering whether to renovate their dated bi-level or upgrade to a new house entirely: the classic love-it-or-list-it dilemma. The whole house needed to be touched, really: bathrooms and kitchen, lighting and flooring and paint everywhere, not to mention new furniture to fill in and improve the living spaces. We spent a year with this family, considering options that were less transformative but allowed for the whole house to be upgraded, as well as options that dramatically changed the main living space but meant the rest of the house would have to wait. Meanwhile, they kept an eye out for better digs in town: a house at their price point, that met their family's needs and matched their aesthetic without major construction.
After a year of hunting, hemming and hawing: they pulled the trigger. Give us the whole enchilada in the kitchen and main living space, they said. There's no other house for us. The bathrooms and basement can wait. Make this space, where we spend all our time, a place we love to be.
Walls and ceilings came down; clerestory windows went in. A stunning 4-panel sliding door-cum-window wall replaced two separate doors in two separate rooms, and the sun streaming in now gives this house in Indiana a California-like access to the outdoors. The central custom screen does triple duty: displaying the client's objets d'art, hiding an HVAC chase, and holding up the ceiling. The gas fireplace is completely new, with custom shelving on either side. Of course, in 2017, the kitchen anchors everything. Family Central, it features custom cabinetry, honed quartz, a new window wall, and a huge island. Materials are earthy and natural, lending a warm modern effect to the space. The medium stain of the wood and overall horizontality of the design are a nod to the home's era (1967), while white cabinetry and charcoal tile provide a neutral but crisp backdrop for the family's stunning and colorful art collection.
The result: an ordinary bi-level is now an extraordinary home, unlike any other in Bloomington.
Contractor: Rusty Peterson Construction
Cabinetry: Tim Graber Furniture
Photography: Gina Rogers

Brooke Littell Photography
インディアナポリスの中サイズのトランジショナルスタイルのLDKの画像 (濃色無垢フローリング、両方向型暖炉、レンガの暖炉まわり、茶色い床、白い壁)

Description: Industrial Interior Update - Interior Architecture: HAUS | Architecture For Modern Lifestyles - Construction Management: WERK | Build - Photo: Red Rocket Photo

The dining room features limestone tile floor accented with stained wood. A trestle table works well with large scale chairs. Chairs have been slip covered in burlap.

インディアナポリスの中サイズのトラディショナルスタイルのLDKの画像 (ベージュの壁、磁器タイルの床、暖炉なし、ベージュの床)
Open concept Living/Dining/Kitchen with curved wood ceiling, pendant lighting array, billiard dining table, and skyline views -
Interior Design: HAUS | Architecture + LEVEL Interiors -
Furniture: Houseworks -
Photography: Ryan Kurtz
Our poster project for The Three P's, this small midcentury home south of campus has great bones but lacked vibrancy - a je ne sais quoi that the clients were searching to savoir once and for all. SYI worked with them to nail down a design direction and furniture plan, and they decided to invest in the big-impact items first: built-ins and lighting and a fresh paint job that included a beautiful deep blue-green line around the windows. The vintage rug was an Etsy score at an awesome price, but only after the client spent months scouring options and sources online that matched the vision and dimensions of the plan. A good year later, the West Elm sofa went on sale, so the client took advantage; some time after that, they painted the kitchen, created the drop zone / bench area, and rounded out the room with occasional tables and accessories. Their lesson: in patience, and details, there is beauty.
Photography by Gina Rogers Photography


