Search results for "Brick house" in Home Design Ideas
Linda McDougald Design | Postcard from Paris Home
Linda McDougald, principal and lead designer of Linda McDougald Design l Postcard from Paris Home, re-designed and renovated her home, which now showcases an innovative mix of contemporary and antique furnishings set against a dramatic linen, white, and gray palette.
The English country home features floors of dark-stained oak, white painted hardwood, and Lagos Azul limestone. Antique lighting marks most every room, each of which is filled with exquisite antiques from France. At the heart of the re-design was an extensive kitchen renovation, now featuring a La Cornue Chateau range, Sub-Zero and Miele appliances, custom cabinetry, and Waterworks tile.
Find the right local pro for your project
Bennett Frank McCarthy Architects, Inc.
Large traditional two-storey brick red house exterior in DC Metro with a hip roof and a shingle roof.
Amantea Architects
Rosedale ‘PARK’ is a detached garage and fence structure designed for a residential property in an old Toronto community rich in trees and preserved parkland. Located on a busy corner lot, the owner’s requirements for the project were two fold:
1) They wanted to manage views from passers-by into their private pool and entertainment areas while maintaining a connection to the ‘park-like’ public realm; and
2) They wanted to include a place to park their car that wouldn’t jeopardize the natural character of the property or spoil one’s experience of the place.
The idea was to use the new garage, fence, hard and soft landscaping together with the existing house, pool and two large and ‘protected’ trees to create a setting and a particular sense of place for each of the anticipated activities including lounging by the pool, cooking, dining alfresco and entertaining large groups of friends.
Using wood as the primary building material, the solution was to create a light, airy and luminous envelope around each component of the program that would provide separation without containment. The garage volume and fence structure, framed in structural sawn lumber and a variety of engineered wood products, are wrapped in a dark stained cedar skin that is at once solid and opaque and light and transparent.
The fence, constructed of staggered horizontal wood slats was designed for privacy but also lets light and air pass through. At night, the fence becomes a large light fixture providing an ambient glow for both the private garden as well as the public sidewalk. Thin striations of light wrap around the interior and exterior of the property. The wall of the garage separating the pool area and the parked car is an assembly of wood framed windows clad in the same fence material. When illuminated, this poolside screen transforms from an edge into a nearly transparent lantern, casting a warm glow by the pool. The large overhang gives the area by the by the pool containment and sense of place. It edits out the view of adjacent properties and together with the pool in the immediate foreground frames a view back toward the home’s family room. Using the pool as a source of light and the soffit of the overhang a reflector, the bright and luminous water shimmers and reflects light off the warm cedar plane overhead. All of the peripheral storage within the garage is cantilevered off of the main structure and hovers over native grade to significantly reduce the footprint of the building and minimize the impact on existing tree roots.
The natural character of the neighborhood inspired the extensive use of wood as the projects primary building material. The availability, ease of construction and cost of wood products made it possible to carefully craft this project. In the end, aside from its quiet, modern expression, it is well-detailed, allowing it to be a pragmatic storage box, an elevated roof 'garden', a lantern at night, a threshold and place of occupation poolside for the owners.
Photo: Bryan Groulx
3 Bears Landscaping
This is an example of a mid-sized transitional front yard shaded garden in Minneapolis with a retaining wall.
Reload the page to not see this specific ad anymore
Denise Bosley Interiors
Design ideas for a large traditional two-storey brick red house exterior in Los Angeles with a hip roof and a shingle roof.
Rochman Design-Build Inc.
Emily Rose Imagery
Inspiration for a mid-sized traditional two-storey brick red exterior in Detroit with a gable roof.
Inspiration for a mid-sized traditional two-storey brick red exterior in Detroit with a gable roof.
Kitchens by Eileen
Large transitional front door in Philadelphia with a double front door, red walls and a dark wood front door.
Alair Homes Charlotte
Additions, renovations and exterior facelifts
This is an example of a traditional brick exterior in Charlotte.
This is an example of a traditional brick exterior in Charlotte.
Innovative Custom Homes, Inc.
Design ideas for a large traditional two-storey brick red house exterior in Chicago with a hip roof and a shingle roof.
Reload the page to not see this specific ad anymore
BeylaBlue Designs
Ranch style house with white brick exterior, black shutters, grey shingle roof, natural stone walkway, and natural wood front door. Jennifer Vera Photography.
Jairo Leon Architect
Mid-sized tropical two-storey brick beige exterior in New Orleans with a hip roof.
James Gostelow Interiors
Andrew Beasley
Photo of a traditional two-storey brick red exterior in Surrey with a gable roof.
Photo of a traditional two-storey brick red exterior in Surrey with a gable roof.
Brick House - Photos & Ideas | Houzz
Reload the page to not see this specific ad anymore
Foster Dale Architects, Inc.
Anthony May Photography
This is an example of a mid-sized traditional three-storey brick exterior in Chicago.
This is an example of a mid-sized traditional three-storey brick exterior in Chicago.
Ty Gay Builders, Inc.
Photo of a mid-sized traditional one-storey brick brown house exterior in Charlotte with a shingle roof.
STEPHEN FLETCHER ARCHITECTS
Little now remains of the original building apart from the external walls. The rather sober front elevation belies the suc-cession of dramatic spaces which have been created within, and the only indication of the new basement, which has been excavated beneath the entire footprint of the house, is a discreet grille
Photographer: Bruce Hemming
5