巨大な、広い木目調の廊下の写真
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Brad Cox, Architect, Inc.
Grass cloth wallpaper, paneled wainscot, a skylight and a beautiful runner adorn landing at the top of the stairs.
サンフランシスコにあるラグジュアリーな広いトラディショナルスタイルのおしゃれな廊下 (無垢フローリング、茶色い床、羽目板の壁、壁紙、白い壁、格子天井、白い天井) の写真
サンフランシスコにあるラグジュアリーな広いトラディショナルスタイルのおしゃれな廊下 (無垢フローリング、茶色い床、羽目板の壁、壁紙、白い壁、格子天井、白い天井) の写真
Orren Pickell Building Group
The lower level hallway has fully paneled wainscoting, grass cloth walls, and built-in seating. The door to the storage room blends in beautifully. Photo by Mike Kaskel. Interior design by Meg Caswell.
Randy Trainor
This three-story vacation home for a family of ski enthusiasts features 5 bedrooms and a six-bed bunk room, 5 1/2 bathrooms, kitchen, dining room, great room, 2 wet bars, great room, exercise room, basement game room, office, mud room, ski work room, decks, stone patio with sunken hot tub, garage, and elevator.
The home sits into an extremely steep, half-acre lot that shares a property line with a ski resort and allows for ski-in, ski-out access to the mountain’s 61 trails. This unique location and challenging terrain informed the home’s siting, footprint, program, design, interior design, finishes, and custom made furniture.
The home features heavy Douglas Fir post and beam construction with Structural Insulated Panels (SIPS), a completely round turret office with two curved doors and bay windows, two-story granite chimney, ski slope access via a footbridge on the third level, and custom-made furniture and finishes infused with a ski aesthetic including bar stools with ski pole basket bases, an iron boot rack with ski tip shaped holders, and a large great room chandelier sourced from a western company known for their ski lodge lighting.
In formulating and executing a design for the home, the client, architect, builder Dave LeBlanc of The Lawton Compnay, interior designer Randy Trainor of C. Randolph Trainor, LLC, and millworker Mitch Greaves of Littleton Millwork relied on their various personal experiences skiing, ski racing, coaching, and participating in adventure ski travel. These experiences allowed the team to truly “see” how the home would be used and design spaces that supported and enhanced the client’s ski experiences while infusing a natural North Country aesthetic.
Credit: Samyn-D'Elia Architects
Project designed by Franconia interior designer Randy Trainor. She also serves the New Hampshire Ski Country, Lake Regions and Coast, including Lincoln, North Conway, and Bartlett.
For more about Randy Trainor, click here: https://crtinteriors.com/
Claude C. Lapp Architects, LLC
Large Gallery
ワシントンD.C.にあるラグジュアリーな巨大なトラディショナルスタイルのおしゃれな廊下 (ベージュの壁、無垢フローリング) の写真
ワシントンD.C.にあるラグジュアリーな巨大なトラディショナルスタイルのおしゃれな廊下 (ベージュの壁、無垢フローリング) の写真
Colonial Homecrafters, Ltd.
Gallery hallway, coffered ceiling, arched doors, moldings and heart pine floors
リッチモンドにある高級な広いトラディショナルスタイルのおしゃれな廊下 (ベージュの壁、淡色無垢フローリング) の写真
リッチモンドにある高級な広いトラディショナルスタイルのおしゃれな廊下 (ベージュの壁、淡色無垢フローリング) の写真
Deco Design
Hidden door as it's being opened.
Photos by Kimball Ungerman
ソルトレイクシティにある高級な広いトラディショナルスタイルのおしゃれな廊下の写真
ソルトレイクシティにある高級な広いトラディショナルスタイルのおしゃれな廊下の写真
Sellars Lathrop Architects, llc
michael biondo, photographer
ニューヨークにある巨大なコンテンポラリースタイルのおしゃれな廊下 (ベージュの壁、無垢フローリング、茶色い床) の写真
ニューヨークにある巨大なコンテンポラリースタイルのおしゃれな廊下 (ベージュの壁、無垢フローリング、茶色い床) の写真
Noel Cross+Architects
Who says green and sustainable design has to look like it? Designed to emulate the owner’s favorite country club, this fine estate home blends in with the natural surroundings of it’s hillside perch, and is so intoxicatingly beautiful, one hardly notices its numerous energy saving and green features.
Durable, natural and handsome materials such as stained cedar trim, natural stone veneer, and integral color plaster are combined with strong horizontal roof lines that emphasize the expansive nature of the site and capture the “bigness” of the view. Large expanses of glass punctuated with a natural rhythm of exposed beams and stone columns that frame the spectacular views of the Santa Clara Valley and the Los Gatos Hills.
A shady outdoor loggia and cozy outdoor fire pit create the perfect environment for relaxed Saturday afternoon barbecues and glitzy evening dinner parties alike. A glass “wall of wine” creates an elegant backdrop for the dining room table, the warm stained wood interior details make the home both comfortable and dramatic.
The project’s energy saving features include:
- a 5 kW roof mounted grid-tied PV solar array pays for most of the electrical needs, and sends power to the grid in summer 6 year payback!
- all native and drought-tolerant landscaping reduce irrigation needs
- passive solar design that reduces heat gain in summer and allows for passive heating in winter
- passive flow through ventilation provides natural night cooling, taking advantage of cooling summer breezes
- natural day-lighting decreases need for interior lighting
- fly ash concrete for all foundations
- dual glazed low e high performance windows and doors
Design Team:
Noel Cross+Architects - Architect
Christopher Yates Landscape Architecture
Joanie Wick – Interior Design
Vita Pehar - Lighting Design
Conrado Co. – General Contractor
Marion Brenner – Photography
Equine Facility Design
This 215 acre private horse breeding and training facility can house up to 70 horses. Equine Facility Design began the site design when the land was purchased in 2001 and has managed the design team through construction which completed in 2009. Equine Facility Design developed the site layout of roads, parking, building areas, pastures, paddocks, trails, outdoor arena, Grand Prix jump field, pond, and site features. The structures include a 125’ x 250’ indoor steel riding arena building design with an attached viewing room, storage, and maintenance area; and multiple horse barn designs, including a 15 stall retirement horse barn, a 22 stall training barn with rehab facilities, a six stall stallion barn with laboratory and breeding room, a 12 stall broodmare barn with 12’ x 24’ stalls that can become 12’ x 12’ stalls at the time of weaning foals. Equine Facility Design also designed the main residence, maintenance and storage buildings, and pasture shelters. Improvements include pasture development, fencing, drainage, signage, entry gates, site lighting, and a compost facility.
Vermont Timber Works
The interior of this home is very open with the entry and living room flowing as one large space, and then a beautiful balcony that overlooks both spaces.
Photo by John Whession
巨大な、広い木目調の廊下の写真
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