skip to main content
Photos
Photos
Kitchen & DiningKitchenDiningPantryOpen-Plan
LivingLiving RoomFamily RoomHome TheatreSunroom
Bed & BathBathroom Powder RoomBedroomBaby & Kids
OutdoorGardenPatioDeckPool
More SpacesExteriorBalconyVerandahLaundryStaircaseHallwayEntryHome OfficeHome BarStorage & WardrobeView All
Advice
Stories From Houzz
Houzz ToursKitchensBathroomsMore RoomsDecoratingOutdoor LivingRenovatingArchitectureFun HouzzMost PopularLifeHouzz TV
Houzz Discussions
Design DilemmaBefore & AfterPollsKitchensLiving RoomsGardensBathroomsRenovatingHome DecoratingFlooringExteriorBuilding a home
Houzz Research
Houzz TV
Sign In
Join as a Pro
History of Houzz
Houzz Logo Print

The Good House: Design Is in the Details

Plan the small things early on to enhance your architecture and enrich your home’s story

Bud Dietrich, AIA
Bud Dietrich, AIAApril 2, 2015
Houzz Contributor. My name is Bud Dietrich and I am an architect located in the Tampa Bay area of Florida. I am licensed to practice architecture in Illinois, Florida, New Jersey & Wisconsin. Since 1996 I have worked from my home office and provide full architectural services exclusively to the single family residential market. My passion is to transform my clients' houses into their homes. I strive to have the "new" home accommodate my clients' lives without fighting them at every junction. I look to add curb appeal to encourage a beautiful streetscape. And I design any addition to look and feel like it has always been there. Our projects have won numerous design awards as well as having been featured on television (CBS News Sunday Morning, HGTV, CLTV, etc.), in magazines (Better Homes & Gardens, Trends, Womans Day, etc.) and in books (Taunton Press). So don't hesitate to contact me if you're looking to transform your house into your home.
More
Architectural detail gives a house interest, texture, depth, a story and so much more. And while detail can liven up and enrich our experience of a home, it often isn’t thought about until the end. So what happens is that a crown molding gets added as a surface treatment that, while maybe nice, doesn’t seem to have a relationship to the overall architecture. Or a colonial-style balustrade gets installed alongside an Arts and Crafts trim.

The trick, then, is to think about detail early in the design. And while this doesn’t mean that you’ll want to obsess unnecessarily about each and every detail early on, you’ll want to have an understanding of how each detail will enhance and reinforce the architecture.

The two houses here, both very different stylistically, offer some insights into how the careful consideration of details can enrich a home’s story.
Gary Brewer Robert A.M. Stern Architects
1. Classical Detailing

This house in Seaside, Florida, is an example of how all the details about materials, color, texture, light, shadow and decoration were considered early in the design process. It’s clear that Gary Brewer, a partner at Robert A.M. Stern Architects, wanted to employ the language of high-style classical architecture, such as classical columns and pilasters. But he also wanted to create something light, bright and open for this beach setting, so he included more casual touches, such as the pergola over the upper porch and the rafter tails at the eaves.

What results is a home that is both formal — the result of a certain amount of symmetry and classical detailing — and quite livable and relaxed.

Lower exterior paint: Buttermilk 919; upper exterior paint: Honey Harbor 920; trim: Super White PM-1, all by Benjamin Moore
Gary Brewer Robert A.M. Stern Architects
Gary Brewer Robert A.M. Stern Architects
Inside, painted panels from a design by Brewer and painted by Andrew Tedesco hide a TV above the fireplace (its garlands echo a similar motif used on the exterior). The wall paneling is something we’d expect in a beachside cottage, as well as the colors, which are soft, gentle and soothing.

The upper porch features balustrades in the form of little columns and a Greek key pattern etched into the wood columns and trim. While the overall architecture communicates strength, solidity and permanence, the curtains are transient, movable and relaxed.
Gary Brewer Robert A.M. Stern Architects
The shape of a copper ornament found at the top of the house structure finds its way …
Gary Brewer Robert A.M. Stern Architects
… to the kitchen, seen in a decorative detail on the glass-front cabinetry.

Floor: 6-inch plank quarter-sawn strip white oak; walls: 1x8-inch bead-joint vertical painted wood planks; beadboard ceiling: DKC-28, Donald Kaufman Color Collection; cabinet color: 198 Cornsilk, Benjamin Moore; backsplash: handmade C305 2x6-inch tile, Pratt and Larson
Gary Brewer Robert A.M. Stern Architects
And what would a beach cottage that is inspired by classical architecture be without urns with bright fires burning for passing ships to see? But in this case, tall sea grasses replace fire in a copper urn so the idea is constant even though the detail of the material has been changed.

Millwork: E.F. San Juan; window mullions and panels: Pine Forest 451, Benjamin Moore; roof: copper; photos: Peter Aaron

See more of this house
Lake Flato Architects
2. Details of Modern Transparency

Richness of detail isn’t just for those houses in a traditional style. In fact, a modern aesthetic in many ways depends on details that enliven and enhance the overall appeal of the structure.

As such, the same tools are employed to add detail. Texture, material, color, light and shadow create details that, as in the traditional house, tell a compelling story.
Lake Flato Architects
The rich detail in many more contemporary aesthetics is the result of expressing how connections are made and pieces are assembled. The steel post seen in this Austin, Texas, home is an integral part of its design, and the bolts at the steel beam connections have been made visible.
Lake Flato Architects
A path from the parking area into the home stretches over an aboveground lap pool.

The structural elements of the bridge and walkway’s suspension aren’t hidden in walls or ceilings but have been left open to show us how the house was made.

Pool: Johnson Custom Pools
Lake Flato Architects
As in our first example, the more traditional house, the details are consistent throughout. Even the kitchen’s cabinetry — steel shelves with frosted glass panels — is suspended, and the way it is hung has been made evident.
Lake Flato Architects
The concrete walls defining the parking area show the marks of the wood used to form their shapes.
Lake Flato Architects
Even the system of pulleys and counterweights that raises and lowers the garage door is detailed. Not your standard ceiling-hung operator, the system of pulleys and chains is visible, so we know exactly how the garage door is controlled.

Landscape architecture: The Garden Design Studio; photos by Casey Dunn

Learn more about the design of this house
As that great modern architect Mies van der Rohe acknowledged, “God is in the details.” So when you’re thinking about and designing your new home, be it new construction or a renovation, carefully consider the details and how they can enrich its story.

See more of this iconic modern house

More:
The Truth About ‘Simple’ Modern Details

Explore more in the Design Details section on Houzz
Sponsored
  • New Zealand
  • ABOUT
  • CAREERS
  • MOBILE APPS
  • PROFESSIONALS
  • BUTTONS
  • ADVERTISE
  • Terms
  • © 2025 Houzz Inc.