Search results for "Dark brick house" in Home Design Ideas
Bernbaum-Magadini Architects
Photo of a mid-sized midcentury entryway in Dallas with white walls and brick floors.
Crisp Architects
Rob Karosis
Country u-shaped eat-in kitchen in New York with shaker cabinets, white cabinets, stainless steel appliances, granite benchtops and a farmhouse sink.
Country u-shaped eat-in kitchen in New York with shaker cabinets, white cabinets, stainless steel appliances, granite benchtops and a farmhouse sink.
Kathryn Tegreene Interior Design
This stained glass window was not original to the space. It was removed from a different house just before it was going to be torn down and installed in this house. It does a perfect job of letting light in with privacy.
Photographer: John Wilbanks
Interior Designer: Kathryn Tegreene Interior Design
Find the right local pro for your project
Triangle Brick Company
Evoking colors from the ashy embers of a dying fire, our Chesapeake Grey brick features beautiful shades of smoky gray, brown and dark charcoal. This richly-textured and tumbled brick is classified under our Select product tier, providing customers with the highest-quality brick possible. Add an elegant, understated touch to your building project with exterior cladding that's truly superior to the competition, choose Chesapeake Grey from Triangle Brick Company. Looking for this color palette with a more refined texture? Try our Bessemer Grey brick.
VanderHorn Architects
The five bay main block of the façade features a pedimented center bay. Finely detailed dormers with arch top windows sit on a graduated slate roof, anchored by limestone topped chimneys.
Anthony Wilder Design/Build, Inc.
Photography by Morgan Howarth
Inspiration for a traditional brick exterior in DC Metro.
Inspiration for a traditional brick exterior in DC Metro.
Acme Brick Company
The brick color featured on this home is Elderwood. Please visit brick.com for availability in your area. © 2012 Acme Brick Company
Traditional brick exterior in Dallas.
Traditional brick exterior in Dallas.
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Wellborn Inc.
Brick and Cast Stone Exterior
Inspiration for a large traditional two-storey brick exterior in Dallas with a gable roof.
Inspiration for a large traditional two-storey brick exterior in Dallas with a gable roof.
Cathy Schwabe Architecture
Trellis over porch @ Guest House.
Cathy Schwabe, AIA. Designed while at EHDD. Photograph by David Wakely
Inspiration for a traditional patio in San Francisco with brick pavers and a pergola.
Inspiration for a traditional patio in San Francisco with brick pavers and a pergola.
Tsuruta Architects
The demolition of the original extension and its replacement, called for an intervention that can be a part of the original main building without replicating classical vocabulary or gesture. Our intent was to keep a sense of memory, while simultaneously allowing the new intervention to have its own identity.
The original extension had no distinct historical or architectural value, and was structurally unsound, but it had a sloop roof profile typical of those found in terrace house back gardens. We chose to incorporate this banality in the new face of the rear garden – in a way fossilising and persevering its charm to carry some sense of associated memory to those who know it or those who see it new.
As we uncovered the original building fabric, we discovered the history of the house. One of the existing walls had been leaning at a displacement of about one brick thick towards an adjacent building. These significant old movements were registered as cracks on the leaning wall, and have now been revealed and retained within the corridor.The structures of the new envelope have been exposed internally wherever practically possible, so that these surfaces will register the future stories of the house. They also narrate a story of local domestic construction methods by repeating some redundant details that recall the previous state of the house. The bare plaster finish is left exposed in the children's and second bedrooms. Hand marks of workmen trace the process of the work and are now recorded on the internal faces of the building’s fabric. The slow patination of bespoke copper and brass fittings shows the passage of time as they change from their original colour. By registering these notions of memories, the inconsistencies of daily life could fully inhabit the space.
The building materials are all ordinary materials available at a local builder’s merchant – the full potential of which were tested through our detailing and different methods of site executions. The entire building and components were all modeled three dimensionally, with some components and furnishings further broken down to be processed in CNC, so they could be brought to the site as flatpack components. This process cut fabrication time and costs significantly, and reduced the distance between the drawing board and execution on site. Many designs could be executed within a few days notice and at no increase in cost – such as the cheese hole ventilation grill in the kitchen and the children’s height ruler on the column casing.The record of this CNC flatpack process can be traced to the numbering system visible on the faces of each piece. The executed flatpack elements include dining table, chairs and beds, as well as the internal stairs.
Triangle Brick Company
With subtle tone variations of brown and red, and light and dark gray hazing, Triangle Brick Company's Camden brick is the perfect exterior cladding choice for those who want a look that's just as strong and classic as it is organic. This sand-faced brick is a Standard-tier product and is suitable for a wide range of residential and commercial building applications.
Upside Development
Upside Development completed an contemporary architectural transformation in Taylor Creek Ranch. Evolving from the belief that a beautiful home is more than just a very large home, this 1940’s bungalow was meticulously redesigned to entertain its next life. It's contemporary architecture is defined by the beautiful play of wood, brick, metal and stone elements. The flow interchanges all around the house between the dark black contrast of brick pillars and the live dynamic grain of the Canadian cedar facade. The multi level roof structure and wrapping canopies create the airy gloom similar to its neighbouring ravine.
James McDonald Associate Architects, PC
Front elevation of house.
2014 Glenda Cherry Photography
This is an example of a large traditional three-storey brick beige exterior in DC Metro with a hip roof.
This is an example of a large traditional three-storey brick beige exterior in DC Metro with a hip roof.
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Mitchell Wall Architecture and Design
Alise O'Brien Photography
As Featured in http://www.stlmag.com/St-Louis-AT-HOME/ The Forever House
Practicality, programming flexibility, amenities, innovative design, and rpojection toward the site and landscaping are common goals. Sometimes the site's inherent contradictions establish the design and the final design pays homage to the site. Such is the case in this Classic home, built in Old Towne Clayton on a City lot.
The family had one basic requirement: they wanted a home to last their entire lives. The result of the design team is a stack of three floors, each with 2,200 s.f.. This is a basic design, termed a foursquare house, with four large rooms on each floor - a plan that has been used for centuries. The exterior is classic: the interior provides a twist. Interior architectural details call to mind details from the Arts and Crafts movement, such as archways throughout the house, simple millwork, and hardwre appropriate to the period.
the Airey Group
Photo of a mid-sized traditional three-storey brick white exterior in Vancouver with a hip roof.
CHROFI
Elegant and minimalist kitchen in classic marble and soft dark tones.
The Balmoral House is located within the lower north-shore suburb of Balmoral. The site presents many difficulties being wedged shaped, on the low side of the street, hemmed in by two substantial existing houses and with just half the land area of its neighbours. Where previously the site would have enjoyed the benefits of a sunny rear yard beyond the rear building alignment, this is no longer the case with the yard having been sold-off to the neighbours.
Our design process has been about finding amenity where on first appearance there appears to be little.
The design stems from the first key observation, that the view to Middle Harbour is better from the lower ground level due to the height of the canopy of a nearby angophora that impedes views from the first floor level. Placing the living areas on the lower ground level allowed us to exploit setback controls to build closer to the rear boundary where oblique views to the key local features of Balmoral Beach and Rocky Point Island are best.
This strategy also provided the opportunity to extend these spaces into gardens and terraces to the limits of the site, maximising the sense of space of the 'living domain'. Every part of the site is utilised to create an array of connected interior and exterior spaces
The planning then became about ordering these living volumes and garden spaces to maximise access to view and sunlight and to structure these to accommodate an array of social situations for our Client’s young family. At first floor level, the garage and bedrooms are composed in a linear block perpendicular to the street along the south-western to enable glimpses of district views from the street as a gesture to the public realm. Critical to the success of the house is the journey from the street down to the living areas and vice versa. A series of stairways break up the journey while the main glazed central stair is the centrepiece to the house as a light-filled piece of sculpture that hangs above a reflecting pond with pool beyond.
The architecture works as a series of stacked interconnected volumes that carefully manoeuvre down the site, wrapping around to establish a secluded light-filled courtyard and terrace area on the north-eastern side. The expression is 'minimalist modern' to avoid visually complicating an already dense set of circumstances. Warm natural materials including off-form concrete, neutral bricks and blackbutt timber imbue the house with a calm quality whilst floor to ceiling glazing and large pivot and stacking doors create light-filled interiors, bringing the garden inside.
In the end the design reverses the obvious strategy of an elevated living space with balcony facing the view. Rather, the outcome is a grounded compact family home sculpted around daylight, views to Balmoral and intertwined living and garden spaces that satisfy the social needs of a growing young family.
Photo Credit: Katherine Lu
Triangle Brick Company
Offered exclusively under Triangle Brick Company's Select product tier, our Oyster Bay brick's vintage-inspired, white-washed appearance gives a surprisingly modern feel to your building project. The pearl-colored surface of this tumbled brick, along with subtle blue-gray accents, finish off the look for an eye-catching, old-world appeal.
Dark Brick House - Photos & Ideas | Houzz
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Bennett Frank McCarthy Architects, Inc.
© Paul Burk Photography
Photo of a contemporary split-level exterior in DC Metro with wood siding.
Photo of a contemporary split-level exterior in DC Metro with wood siding.
Triangle Brick Company
If you're looking for exterior cladding that will feature the best elements of the earth it's built on, consider Northampton brick. By bringing together all of nature's best tones, browns, creams and burnt grays, Triangle Brick Company's Standard-tier Northampton brick offers a level of variety and versatility to your building project. No matter where your project is built, this sand-faced brick will both match and enhance its natural setting. Looking for a more rustic texture, but love these colors?
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