Search results for "External stairs" in Home Design Ideas
Miracle Contractors, LLC
External stairs constructed with composite boards (trex) with a 4x4 landing and while vinyl posts & railing. Upgraded to solar post caps.
Photo of a mid-sized mediterranean straight staircase in Baltimore with wood risers.
Photo of a mid-sized mediterranean straight staircase in Baltimore with wood risers.
Miracle Contractors, LLC
External stairs constructed with composite boards (trex) with a 4x4 landing and while vinyl posts & railing. Upgraded to solar post caps.
Inspiration for a mid-sized mediterranean straight staircase in Baltimore with wood risers.
Inspiration for a mid-sized mediterranean straight staircase in Baltimore with wood risers.
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Miracle Contractors, LLC
Arched door leading to external stairs. Separate HVAC unit in room. Man Cave/Bonus Room was built above a 2 car garage with a dormer on front and back. Also became 'Cat Cave' LOL. Has separate exterior entrance via composite steps and 4x4 landing, plus entrance into main part of house. Includes full bathroom with custom tiled shower & porcelain tile flooring. Main area fully carpeted, recessed lighting, wall sconces, ceiling fan and hanging lights.
Anna Williamson Architects
Our client wanted to create a warm, homely and light-filled environment that would draw their family together. Achieving this involved extensive internal and external reconfiguration to reorganise and interconnect the family living spaces and to bring natural light, access to and views of the garden into the heart of the home.
This is a recently built split-level, semi-detached property; the internal stairway received no natural lighting giving an uninviting link between each room. The family rooms were located away from the sunny garden and the office was installed in the attic, separating the family to the least appealing corners of the house for daytime activities, connected by the uninviting staircase. The south facing living room was remote from the main living spaces and had small low doors affording little view to the garden.
Our intervention focussed on making the underused garden room viable and worthy as the best room in the house. In order to house the kitchen, dining and tv snug, we pushed the rear wall out and up, installing a series of full height glazed doors to the rear as well as rooflights, raising sightlines for views of the sky and garden and giving level entry to a new enclosed terrace with permanent seating, barbeque and storage. External stairs connect up to the main garden and sweep onwards back to a second family room. The living spaces, now all located to the sunny rear, flow together, with the kitchen and barbeque reinstated as the hub of family life.
We added a welcoming porch and refurbished the entrance hall, highlighting the previously obscured frontage and affording immediate views from it through to the garden on entry as well as adding plenty of storage. Unable to add windows to the stair, we inserted a large rooflight and opened up the half landings to it with floor glass and mirrors. Glazed internal walls bring light from front and back at each landing, flooding the stair with natural light and giving continually repeating views to the sky and garden.
The refurbishment, with beautiful, tactile and textured surfaces, layers warmth onto contemporary concrete, steel and glass to further enrich the homely ambiance in conjunction with the natural external textures visible from every space.
Anna Williamson Architects
Our client wanted to create a warm, homely and light-filled environment that would draw their family together. Achieving this involved extensive internal and external reconfiguration to reorganise and interconnect the family living spaces and to bring natural light, access to and views of the garden into the heart of the home.
This is a recently built split-level, semi-detached property; the internal stairway received no natural lighting giving an uninviting link between each room. The family rooms were located away from the sunny garden and the office was installed in the attic, separating the family to the least appealing corners of the house for daytime activities, connected by the uninviting staircase. The south facing living room was remote from the main living spaces and had small low doors affording little view to the garden.
Our intervention focussed on making the underused garden room viable and worthy as the best room in the house. In order to house the kitchen, dining and tv snug, we pushed the rear wall out and up, installing a series of full height glazed doors to the rear as well as rooflights, raising sightlines for views of the sky and garden and giving level entry to a new enclosed terrace with permanent seating, barbeque and storage. External stairs connect up to the main garden and sweep onwards back to a second family room. The living spaces, now all located to the sunny rear, flow together, with the kitchen and barbeque reinstated as the hub of family life.
We added a welcoming porch and refurbished the entrance hall, highlighting the previously obscured frontage and affording immediate views from it through to the garden on entry as well as adding plenty of storage. Unable to add windows to the stair, we inserted a large rooflight and opened up the half landings to it with floor glass and mirrors. Glazed internal walls bring light from front and back at each landing, flooding the stair with natural light and giving continually repeating views to the sky and garden.
The refurbishment, with beautiful, tactile and textured surfaces, layers warmth onto contemporary concrete, steel and glass to further enrich the homely ambiance in conjunction with the natural external textures visible from every space.
Anna Williamson Architects
Our client wanted to create a warm, homely and light-filled environment that would draw their family together. Achieving this involved extensive internal and external reconfiguration to reorganise and interconnect the family living spaces and to bring natural light, access to and views of the garden into the heart of the home.
This is a recently built split-level, semi-detached property; the internal stairway received no natural lighting giving an uninviting link between each room. The family rooms were located away from the sunny garden and the office was installed in the attic, separating the family to the least appealing corners of the house for daytime activities, connected by the uninviting staircase. The south facing living room was remote from the main living spaces and had small low doors affording little view to the garden.
Our intervention focussed on making the underused garden room viable and worthy as the best room in the house. In order to house the kitchen, dining and tv snug, we pushed the rear wall out and up, installing a series of full height glazed doors to the rear as well as rooflights, raising sightlines for views of the sky and garden and giving level entry to a new enclosed terrace with permanent seating, barbeque and storage. External stairs connect up to the main garden and sweep onwards back to a second family room. The living spaces, now all located to the sunny rear, flow together, with the kitchen and barbeque reinstated as the hub of family life.
We added a welcoming porch and refurbished the entrance hall, highlighting the previously obscured frontage and affording immediate views from it through to the garden on entry as well as adding plenty of storage. Unable to add windows to the stair, we inserted a large rooflight and opened up the half landings to it with floor glass and mirrors. Glazed internal walls bring light from front and back at each landing, flooding the stair with natural light and giving continually repeating views to the sky and garden.
The refurbishment, with beautiful, tactile and textured surfaces, layers warmth onto contemporary concrete, steel and glass to further enrich the homely ambiance in conjunction with the natural external textures visible from every space.
Auhaus Architecture
Bluff House Concrete and copper cladding. Concrete landscape stair leads to front door at first floor level.
Photography: Auhaus Architecture
Contemporary three-storey exterior in Melbourne with mixed siding and a flat roof.
Contemporary three-storey exterior in Melbourne with mixed siding and a flat roof.
Suzanne Martin Design
Contemporary style, 'rational' cabinetry Atmos Collection in Bookmatched stripey oak, bog wood horizontal wood grain finish. Stainless steel back splash, antiqued cambrian black stone surface along with glass bartop on stainless step posts, with footrest. Floating (ceiling hung) decorative bulkhead with lighting and wine glass racks.
Horizon - Residential & Commercial Builders
Brett Boardman
Inspiration for a modern exterior in Sydney.
Inspiration for a modern exterior in Sydney.
User
This project was initially a main floor renovation – the kitchen was old and dated and the layout was poor for entertaining.
Sounds simple enough, but it was only achieved by removing a trap door and the original external basement stairs and building a new side entrance to the lower level. From our first meeting I knew that the trap door was going to be the boss of the renovation – sometimes it’s the oddest things in a home that determine the course, size and scope of a project. We increased the size of the main floor by levelling of the back of the house; this increased the foot print in the kitchen and brought in much more natural light. Custom millwork and plaster mouldings were designed and installed in every room. Lighting was updated and new furniture and soft-furnishings were designed and sourced. On the second floor we renovated the master bedroom and the dressing room. In the basement we dug down, greatly improving the head height and formed a cozy media room and a lux laundry and mudroom.
Before and after photographs can be found on our website.
Photography by Tim McGhie
Dan Nelson, Designs Northwest Architects
Spiral stair to putting green on the roof. Photography by Ben Benschneider.
Small industrial brown house exterior in Seattle with mixed siding, a flat roof and a green roof.
Small industrial brown house exterior in Seattle with mixed siding, a flat roof and a green roof.
Dean Herald-Rolling Stone Landscapes
Rolling Stone Landscapes
Photo of a large contemporary backyard custom-shaped pool in Sydney.
Photo of a large contemporary backyard custom-shaped pool in Sydney.
Sky Architect Studio
The main internal feature of the house, the design of the floating staircase involved extensive days working together with a structural engineer to refine so that each solid timber stair tread sat perfectly in between long vertical timber battens without the need for stair stringers. This unique staircase was intended to give a feeling of lightness to complement the floating facade and continuous flow of internal spaces.
The warm timber of the staircase continues throughout the refined, minimalist interiors, with extensive use for flooring, kitchen cabinetry and ceiling, combined with luxurious marble in the bathrooms and wrapping the high-ceilinged main bedroom in plywood panels with 10mm express joints.
External Stairs - Photos & Ideas | Houzz
Fleetwood Windows & Doors
Taiyo Watanabe
This is an example of a large contemporary two-storey white exterior in Los Angeles.
This is an example of a large contemporary two-storey white exterior in Los Angeles.
Urrutia Design
URRUTIA DESIGN
Photography by Matt Sartain
Design ideas for a traditional patio in San Francisco with brick pavers.
Design ideas for a traditional patio in San Francisco with brick pavers.
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