Search results for "Roof materials australia" in Home Design Ideas
AT6 Design Build
Cedar, glass tile, bamboo plywood, and Caesarstone bring a rich pallette of materials into this small bathroom
This is an example of a mid-sized modern master bathroom in San Francisco with a freestanding tub, mosaic tile, an open shower, an open shower, a one-piece toilet, grey walls, an undermount sink, grey floor, flat-panel cabinets, light wood cabinets, engineered quartz benchtops and white benchtops.
This is an example of a mid-sized modern master bathroom in San Francisco with a freestanding tub, mosaic tile, an open shower, an open shower, a one-piece toilet, grey walls, an undermount sink, grey floor, flat-panel cabinets, light wood cabinets, engineered quartz benchtops and white benchtops.
Glenn Layton Homes
Glenn Layton Homes, LLC, "Building Your Coastal Lifestyle"
Inspiration for a mid-sized beach style two-storey beige house exterior in Jacksonville with wood siding and a hip roof.
Inspiration for a mid-sized beach style two-storey beige house exterior in Jacksonville with wood siding and a hip roof.
Coburn Design Build
This 2,500 s.f. vacation home is designed with the living, dining, and kitchen spaces on the second floor to maximize the breathtaking views and sunlight year-round. The exterior of the house utilizes a unique blend of materials including board and batten siding, chinked logs, and galvanized roofing. These demonstrate a modern interpretation of both the mountain aesthetic and Crested Butte’s western Victorian architecture. This ideal family retreat has been featured in Better Homes and Gardens.
Find the right local pro for your project
BARRETT STUDIO architects
Embraced by the South Hampton woods in upstate New York, this residence - in harmony with two art studios - shelters a peaceful landscaped clearing anchored by a sculpted pool. A regulated patchwork of building materials create surface textures and patterns that flow around corners, connect the ground to the sky, and map through to interior spaces.
Integration of alternative and sustainable materials include SIPs, geothermal energy heat sourcing, and a photo-voltaic array. This comfortably eclectic retreat contemplates resourceful living at a hyper-creative level.
Photos by: Brian Vandenbrink
Hursthouse Landscape Architects and Contractors
After removing an outdated circle drive and overgrown plantings, our team reconfigured the drive and installed a full-range color bluestone walk to clearly emphasize the main door over the side entry.
RD Architecture, LLC
Photo of a midcentury one-storey grey house exterior in Houston with concrete fiberboard siding, a hip roof and a metal roof.
ZeroEnergy Design
Modern Cape Cod green home earned LEED Gold certification for green features including solar electric, a green roof, and the use of sustainable materials. Construction by Cape Associates. Photos by Michael J Lee. Green architecture by ZeroEnergy Design. www.Zeroenergy.com
Reload the page to not see this specific ad anymore
David Coleman / Architecture
Tower House by David Coleman / Architecture located in the Wallingford neighborhood of Seattle, WA.
Inspiration for a modern rooftop and rooftop deck in Seattle.
Inspiration for a modern rooftop and rooftop deck in Seattle.
Sicora Design/Build
This project features an award winning front facade make over. The existing mansard roof was framed over to create a new look that provides some solid curb appeal! The interior of the home did not need to be modified to accommodate this renovation, since all of the construction occurred on the outside of the home.
John Ray Photography
Kraft Custom Construction
This 1914 family farmhouse was passed down from the original owners to their grandson and his young family. The original goal was to restore the old home to its former glory. However, when we started planning the remodel, we discovered the foundation needed to be replaced, the roof framing didn’t meet code, all the electrical, plumbing and mechanical would have to be removed, siding replaced, and much more. We quickly realized that instead of restoring the home, it would be more cost effective to deconstruct the home, recycle the materials, and build a replica of the old house using as much of the salvaged materials as we could.
The design of the new construction is greatly influenced by the old home with traditional craftsman design interiors. We worked with a deconstruction specialist to salvage the old-growth timber and reused or re-purposed many of the original materials. We moved the house back on the property, connecting it to the existing garage, and lowered the elevation of the home which made it more accessible to the existing grades. The new home includes 5-panel doors, columned archways, tall baseboards, reused wood for architectural highlights in the kitchen, a food-preservation room, exercise room, playful wallpaper in the guest bath and fun era-specific fixtures throughout.
QKS Limited
Whether replacing an existing roof or building a new extension, an Atlas lantern roof from QKS is a great way to pull natural light into a room.
The Atlas lanterns offer exceptional benefits unmatched by any other roof on the market. The internal and external design compliments any home whilst flooding any room with maximum light.
KUBE architecture
When man's aspiration is the sky, the ground is only a resistance. - Sverre Fehn In this renovation, a conventional masonry row house is opened up to the sky, with a light, airy interior. The original floor plan was completely transformed for more efficient function and a greater sense of spatial connection, both vertically and horizontally. From a grounded lower level, with concrete, cork, and warm finishes, an abstract composition of crisp forms emerges. The kitchen sits at the center of the house as a hearth, establishing the line between dark and light, illustrated through wenge base cabinets with light anigre above. Service spaces such as bathrooms and closets are hidden within the thickness of walls, contributing to the overall simplicity of the design. A new central staircase serves as the backbone of the composition, bordered by a cable wall tensioned top and bottom, connecting the solid base of the house with the light steel structure above. A glass roof hovers overhead, as gravity recedes and walls seem to rise up and float. The overall effect is clean and minimal, transforming vertically from dark to light, warm to cool, grounded to weightless, and culminating in a space composed of line and plane, shadows and light.
Dawn Hearn Interior Design
This stunning custom home is set in a beautiful Texas Hill Country location. Tre Dunham with Fine Focus Photography
Mediterranean exterior in Austin with stone veneer, a gable roof and a metal roof.
Mediterranean exterior in Austin with stone veneer, a gable roof and a metal roof.
Reload the page to not see this specific ad anymore
Neumann Mendro Andrulaitis Architects LLP
Jim Bartsch
This is an example of a large beach style two-storey white exterior in Santa Barbara with mixed siding.
This is an example of a large beach style two-storey white exterior in Santa Barbara with mixed siding.
Albert, Righter & Tittmann Architects, Inc.
River Point is a new house that incorporates a row of picturesquely disheveled old sheds and barns into a connected whole. The aim is to play up the idea of organic growth over time, without jarring contrasts between old and new buildings. The sheds set the stage, one of them acting as a gate lodge that you go through to get to the house.
The language and materials of the house are compatible with but distinct from the sheds. The gambrel roof of the house sweeps out at the eaves in a graceful curve to broad overhangs that shelter generous windows. A stair tower with expressive, exaggerated roof brackets also signals that the new house isn’t an old farm building.
Photography by Robert Brewster
Harwick Homes
The multi-step metal roof, wood framed entrance, and mulit-lite entry doors make this an architecturally interesting façade. The crisp white trim paired with the light yellow walls are fresh and welcoming.
Adrienne DeRosa
Adrienne DeRosa © 2014 Houzz Inc.
The construction of the couple's pool house came along in much the same way as many other aspects of their home. Built mostly of salvaged materials and parts, the size and shape of the pool house was dictated by wall sections that Raymond had found in a dumpster on a job site. As Jennifer adds, "a friend of ours was taking his deck apart and gave us all the lumber for free, and that became our roofing material. My neighbor across the street from us just happened to come over and tell me how he needed to get a new shed door. I asked him if I could take a look at it, and here it was an old dutch door. I asked if I could have it and bless his heart, he gave it to me."
The pool house's roof and shingle-style siding mirror that of the main house, thanks to left over material from when the home was built years ago. "Since we own Sharkey and Son Construction we had the ability to do it all ourselves," Jennifer says. "So we poured the concrete floor and put the walls up. It's still a work in progress with things I have to do to it, but it's definitely a fun story to tell since 90% of it was free."
Photo: Adrienne DeRosa © 2014 Houzz
Reload the page to not see this specific ad anymore
Uptic Studios
Photo: Shaun Cammack
The goal of the project was to create a modern log cabin on Coeur D’Alene Lake in North Idaho. Uptic Studios considered the combined occupancy of two families, providing separate spaces for privacy and common rooms that bring everyone together comfortably under one roof. The resulting 3,000-square-foot space nestles into the site overlooking the lake. A delicate balance of natural materials and custom amenities fill the interior spaces with stunning views of the lake from almost every angle.
The whole project was featured in Jan/Feb issue of Design Bureau Magazine.
See the story here:
http://www.wearedesignbureau.com/projects/cliff-family-robinson/
Arkin Tilt Architects
This 872 s.f. off-grid straw-bale project is a getaway home for a San Francisco couple with two active young boys.
© Eric Millette Photography
Photo of a small country split-level stucco beige exterior in Sacramento with a shed roof.
Photo of a small country split-level stucco beige exterior in Sacramento with a shed roof.
YARD Architects
A playful re-imagining of a Victorian terrace with a large rear extension.
The project started as a problem solving exercise – the owner of the house was very tall and he had never been able to have a shower in the pokey outrigger bathroom, there was simply not enough ceiling height. The lower ground floor kitchen also suffered from low ceilings and was dark and uninviting. There was very little connection to the garden, surrounded by trees, which felt like a lost opportunity. The whole house needed rethinking.
The solution we proposed was to extend into the generous garden at the rear and reconstruct the existing outrigger with an extra storey. We used the outrigger to relocate the staircase to the lower ground floor, moving it from the centre of the house into a double height space in the extension. This gave the house a very generous sense of height and space and allows light to flood into the kitchen and hall from high level windows. These provide glances of the surrounding tress as you descent to the dining room.
The extension allows the kitchen and dining room to push further into the garden, making the most of the views and light. A strip rooflight over the kitchen wall units brings light deep into the space and washes the kitchen with sunlight during the day. Behind the kitchen, where there was no access to natural light, we tucked a utility room and shower room, with a second sitting room at the front of the house. The extension has a green sedum roof to ensure it feels like part of the garden when seen from the upper floors of the house. We used a pale white and yellow brick to complement the colour of the London stock brickwork, but maintain a contemporary aesthetic. Oak windows and sliding door add a warmth to the extension and tie in with the materials we used internally.
Internally there is a palette of bold colours to define the living spaces, including an entirely yellow corridor the client has named ‘The Yolky Way’ leading from the kitchen to the front reception room, complete with hidden yellow doors. These are offset against more natural materials such as the oak batten cladding, which define the dining space and also line the back wall of the kitchen concealing the fridge door and larder units. A bespoke terrazzo counter unites the colours of the floor, oak cladding and cupboard doors and the tiled floor leads seamlessly to the outside patio, leading the eye back into the garden.
A new bathroom with a generous ceiling height was placed in the reconstructed outrigger, with triple aspect windows, including a picture window at the end of the bath framing views of the trees in the garden.
Upstairs we kept the traditional Victorian layout, refurbished the windows and shutters, reinstating cornice and ceiling roses to the principal rooms. At every point in the project the ergonomics of the house were considered, tall doors, very high kitchen worktops and always maximising ceiling heights, ensuring the house was more suited to its tall owner.
20