Bathroom Design Ideas with Medium Hardwood Floors and Bamboo Floors
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Leicht Hallandale Beach
LEICHT, www.LeichtFL.com, www.Leicht.com, http://www.leicht.com/en-us/find-a-showroom/ Photo: Kuo-Min Lee
Program: TOBIA/ H 220h oak anthracite
Handles: 770.000 SensoMatic 860.413 vertical recessed handle
Countertop: AP E 2 stainless steel / Silestone
Sink: Artinox
Faucet: Dornbracht, model: Tara Ultra
Electrical Appliances: Electrolux/ Liebherr
Roomscapes Cabinetry and Design Center
Upper Wall: Benjamin Moore Gray Cashmere Paint.
Lower wall: Crushed glass with stone rhomboid mosaic from the Aura Harlequin Collection in silver cloud color, that comes in 12" x 12" sheets, finished with 2" x 12" honed marble chair rail with ogee edge.
TOTO Pedestal sink & Water closet from the Guinevere Collection.
Melissa Hill Home Design
Hartley Hill Design
When our clients moved into their already built home they decided to live in it for a while before making any changes. Once they were settled they decided to hire us as their interior designers to renovate and redesign various spaces of their home. As they selected the spaces to be renovated they expressed a strong need for storage and customization. They allowed us to design every detail as well as oversee the entire construction process directing our team of skilled craftsmen. The home is a traditional home so it was important for us to retain some of the traditional elements while incorporating our clients style preferences.
Custom designed by Hartley and Hill Design.
All materials and furnishings in this space are available through Hartley and Hill Design. www.hartleyandhilldesign.com
888-639-0639
Neil Landino Photography
Lancaster County Timber Frames, Inc.
This bathroom is part of a repurposed tobacco barn that has been updated to ask as a home. Aluminum, wide plank flooring, stone and creativity all come together to make this an interesting home.
Betty Wasserman Art & Interiors
Hallway design is just as important as the rest of the home! Our goal is to create a cohesive and holistic design that speaks to our client's taste and lifestyle. With unique materials, plush textiles, and intriguing artwork, we were able to create welcoming entryways and purposeful hallways.
Project completed by New York interior design firm Betty Wasserman Art & Interiors, which serves New York City, as well as across the tri-state area and in The Hamptons.
For more about Betty Wasserman, click here: https://www.bettywasserman.com/
To learn more about this project, click here: https://www.bettywasserman.com/spaces/macdougal-manor/
Jane Kim Architect
Photography by Eduard Hueber / archphoto
North and south exposures in this 3000 square foot loft in Tribeca allowed us to line the south facing wall with two guest bedrooms and a 900 sf master suite. The trapezoid shaped plan creates an exaggerated perspective as one looks through the main living space space to the kitchen. The ceilings and columns are stripped to bring the industrial space back to its most elemental state. The blackened steel canopy and blackened steel doors were designed to complement the raw wood and wrought iron columns of the stripped space. Salvaged materials such as reclaimed barn wood for the counters and reclaimed marble slabs in the master bathroom were used to enhance the industrial feel of the space.
Tracy A. Stone Architect
This remodeled bathroom now serves as powder room for the kitchen/family room and a guest bath adjacent to the media room with its pull-down Murphy bed. Since the bathroom opens directly off the family room, we created a small entry with planter and low views to the garden beyond. The shower now features a deck of ironwood, smooth-trowel plaster walls and an enclosure made of 3-form recycle resin panels with embedded reeds. The space is flooded with natural light from the new skylight above.
Design Team: Tracy Stone, Donatella Cusma', Sherry Cefali
Engineer: Dave Cefali
Photo: Lawrence Anderson
Duet Design Group
One of our favorite ways to encourage client's to go bold is in their powder bathrooms.
Photo by Emily Minton Redfield
J.THOM Residential Design & Cabinetry
Clients wanted to keep a powder room on the first floor and desired to relocate it away from kitchen and update the look. We needed to minimize the powder room footprint and tuck it into a service area instead of an open public area.
We minimize the footprint and tucked the PR across from the basement stair which created a small ancillary room and buffer between the adjacent rooms. We used a small wall hung basin to make the small room feel larger by exposing more of the floor footprint. Wainscot paneling was installed to create balance, scale and contrasting finishes.
The new powder room exudes simple elegance from the polished nickel hardware, rich contrast and delicate accent lighting. The space is comfortable in scale and leaves you with a sense of eloquence.
Jonathan Kolbe, Photographer
Bathroom Design Ideas with Medium Hardwood Floors and Bamboo Floors
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