低価格のコンテンポラリースタイルの黒い外観の家 (オレンジの外壁) の写真
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Architecture Republic
Eddie Misic - Eddison Photographic Studios
キャンベラにある低価格の中くらいなコンテンポラリースタイルのおしゃれな家の外観 (コンクリートサイディング) の写真
キャンベラにある低価格の中くらいなコンテンポラリースタイルのおしゃれな家の外観 (コンクリートサイディング) の写真
Atelier Ose
Redonner à la façade côté jardin une dimension domestique était l’un des principaux enjeux de ce projet, qui avait déjà fait l’objet d’une première extension. Il s’agissait également de réaliser des travaux de rénovation énergétique comprenant l’isolation par l’extérieur de toute la partie Est de l’habitation.
Les tasseaux de bois donnent à la partie basse un aspect chaleureux, tandis que des ouvertures en aluminium anthracite, dont le rythme resserré affirme un style industriel rappelant l’ancienne véranda, donnent sur une grande terrasse en béton brut au rez-de-chaussée. En partie supérieure, le bardage horizontal en tôle nervurée anthracite vient contraster avec le bois, tout en résonnant avec la teinte des menuiseries. Grâce à l’accord entre les matières et à la subdivision de cette façade en deux langages distincts, l’effet de verticalité est estompé, instituant ainsi une nouvelle échelle plus intimiste et accueillante.
Sandberg Schoffel Architects
The covered entry stair leads to the outdoor living space under the flying roof. The building is all steel framed and clad for fire resistance. Sprinklers on the roof can be remotely activated to provide fire protection if needed.
Photo; Guy Allenby
Thomas Alexander
This backland development is currently under
construction and comprises five 3 bedroom courtyard
houses, four two bedroom flats and a commercial unit
fronting Heath Road.
Previously a garage site, the project had an
unsuccessful planning history before Thomas
Alexander crafted the approved scheme and was
considered an un-developable site by the vendor.
The proposal of courtyard houses with adaptive roof
forms minimised the massing at sensitive areas of the
backland site and created a predominantly inward
facing housetype to minimise overlooking and create
light, bright and tranquil living spaces.
The concept seeks to celebrate the prior industrial
use of the site. Formal brickwork creates a strong
relationship with the streetscape and a standing seam
cladding suggests a more industrial finish to pay
homage to the prior raw materiality of the backland
site.
The relationship between these two materials is ever
changing throughout the scheme. At the streetscape,
tall and slender brick piers ofer a strong stance and
appear to be controlling and holding back a metal
clad form which peers between the brickwork. They
are graceful in nature and appear to effortlessly
restrain the metal form.
Phase two of the project is due to be completed in
the first quarter of 2020 and will deliver 4 flats and a
commercial unit to the frontage at Heath Road.
Bioi. Design + Build
The inset cedar gables are patterned as a graphical reflection of the tree growth in the area over the past 100 years. A government report of tree growth that analyzed the tree rings of local trees provided a metric that could be reinterpreted as board widths. These were calculated and installed as the east and west gables; a contextual reference to the age of the farmstead on the new house.
Architectural Squared
Just a few miles south of the Deer Valley ski resort is Brighton Estates, a community with summer vehicle access that requires a snowmobile or skis in the winter. This tiny cabin is just under 1000 SF of conditioned space and serves its outdoor enthusiast family year round. No space is wasted and the structure is designed to stand the harshest of storms.
Thomas Alexander
This backland development is currently under
construction and comprises five 3 bedroom courtyard
houses, four two bedroom flats and a commercial unit
fronting Heath Road.
Previously a garage site, the project had an
unsuccessful planning history before Thomas
Alexander crafted the approved scheme and was
considered an un-developable site by the vendor.
The proposal of courtyard houses with adaptive roof
forms minimised the massing at sensitive areas of the
backland site and created a predominantly inward
facing housetype to minimise overlooking and create
light, bright and tranquil living spaces.
The concept seeks to celebrate the prior industrial
use of the site. Formal brickwork creates a strong
relationship with the streetscape and a standing seam
cladding suggests a more industrial finish to pay
homage to the prior raw materiality of the backland
site.
The relationship between these two materials is ever
changing throughout the scheme. At the streetscape,
tall and slender brick piers ofer a strong stance and
appear to be controlling and holding back a metal
clad form which peers between the brickwork. They
are graceful in nature and appear to effortlessly
restrain the metal form.
Phase two of the project is due to be completed in
the first quarter of 2020 and will deliver 4 flats and a
commercial unit to the frontage at Heath Road.
低価格のコンテンポラリースタイルの黒い外観の家 (オレンジの外壁) の写真
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