Search results for "Breezeway" in Home Design Ideas
HAVEN design+building llc
Owners of this country ranch home wanted to add a three bay carriage barn for vehicles and garden equipment. The challenge here was to provide a covered walkway between the structures that didn't cut off the view to the beautiful country garden meadow in back of the home. The solution we created was to separate the two structures, and frame the view with an open breezeway.
HAVEN design+building llc
Kaplan Thompson Architects
Photo Trent Bell
Inspiration for a large country mudroom in Portland Maine with a light wood front door and concrete floors.
Inspiration for a large country mudroom in Portland Maine with a light wood front door and concrete floors.
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Hills & Grant
Photo: Lisa Petrole
Inspiration for an expansive contemporary hallway in San Francisco with porcelain floors, grey floor and white walls.
Inspiration for an expansive contemporary hallway in San Francisco with porcelain floors, grey floor and white walls.
Eric Reinholdt, Architect
Looking down the glazed connector toward the main entry and public wing. The link connects both the one story public wing to the private two story wing and it forces a reflection back to the wooded site the building is carefully knit into.
Eric Reinholdt - Project Architect/Lead Designer with Elliott, Elliott, Norelius Architecture
Photo: Brian Vanden Brink
J Wilson Fuqua & Associates Architects
J Wilson Fuqua & Assoc.
Design ideas for a large traditional backyard patio in Dallas with a pergola.
Design ideas for a large traditional backyard patio in Dallas with a pergola.
LMK Interiors
Farmhouse in Barn Red and gorgeous landscaping by CK Landscape. Lune Lake Stone fireplace
Photo of a large country two-storey red house exterior in San Francisco with wood siding, a gable roof and a shingle roof.
Photo of a large country two-storey red house exterior in San Francisco with wood siding, a gable roof and a shingle roof.
Smith & Vansant Architects PC
This is an example of a traditional side yard garden in Burlington with natural stone pavers.
BC&J Architecture
The Back Bay House is comprised of two main structures, a nocturnal wing and a daytime wing, joined by a glass gallery space. The daytime wing maintains an informal living arrangement that includes the dining space placed in an intimate alcove, a large country kitchen and relaxing seating area which opens to a classic covered porch and on to the water’s edge. The nocturnal wing houses three bedrooms. The master at the water side enjoys views and sounds of the wildlife and the shore while the two subordinate bedrooms soak in views of the garden and neighboring meadow.
To bookend the scale and mass of the house, a whimsical tower was included to the nocturnal wing. The tower accommodates flex space for a bunk room, office or studio space. Materials and detailing of this house are based on a classic cottage vernacular language found in these sorts of buildings constructed in pre-war north america and harken back to a simpler time and scale. Eastern white cedar shingles, white painted trim and moulding collectively add a layer of texture and richness not found in today’s lexicon of detail. The house is 1,628 sf plus a 228 sf tower and a detached, two car garage which employs massing, detail and scale to allow the main house to read as dominant but not overbearing.
Designed by BC&J Architecture.
Whitten Architects
photography by Rob Karosis
Photo of a beach style exterior in Portland Maine with wood siding.
Photo of a beach style exterior in Portland Maine with wood siding.
AKJ Architects LLC
Exterior View of Carriage House.
Benjamin Benschneider
Photo of a traditional detached three-car garage in Seattle.
Photo of a traditional detached three-car garage in Seattle.
Schmidt Custom Homes
Photo by Casey Fry A blend of charcoal gray limestone from a quarry in Leuders, TX, and Oklahoma sandstone on the exterior and interior of this home.
Elliott Architects
This design for a year-round retirement home addresses all aspects of the site, which resides on the western flank of Blue Hill Bay and has easterly water views framed by a mature forest of oak, birch, and fir. The use of natural materials, featuring wood in all aspects, was an important way to tie the building to its site and its cultural context.
Photo by Rob Karosis
Architectural Resource LLC
Our Clients, the proud owners of a landmark 1860’s era Italianate home, desired to greatly improve their daily ingress and egress experience. With a growing young family, the lack of a proper entry area and attached garage was something they wanted to address. They also needed a guest suite to accommodate frequent out-of-town guests and visitors. But in the homeowner’s own words, “He didn’t want to be known as the guy who ‘screwed up’ this beautiful old home”. Our design challenge was to provide the needed space of a significant addition, but do so in a manner that would respect the historic home. Our design solution lay in providing a “hyphen”: a multi-functional daily entry breezeway connector linking the main house with a new garage and in-law suite above.
Breezeway - Photos & Ideas | Houzz
Polhemus Savery DaSilva
Brian Vanden Brink
This is an example of a traditional front door in Boston with a single front door.
This is an example of a traditional front door in Boston with a single front door.
RKD Architects, Inc
The exterior shows the natural pond and the bridge that spans from the master to the living area. The patios overlook the pond. The stone was harvested from the site and is set in subtle courses to add refinement. Photo: Gibeon Photography
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