Bedroom Design Ideas with Concrete Floors

Midcentury Moroccan Loft Guest Bedroom and Dining Area | Kimball Starr Interior
Midcentury Moroccan Loft Guest Bedroom and Dining Area | Kimball Starr Interior
Kimball Starr Interior DesignKimball Starr Interior Design
Retracting opaque sliding walls with an open convertible Murphy bed on the left wall, allowing for more living space. In front, a Moroccan metal table functions as a portable side table. The guest bedroom wall separates the open-plan dining space featuring mid-century modern dining table and chairs in coordinating striped colors from the larger loft living area.
Meadowbrook Bothy
Meadowbrook Bothy
UserUser
Lucy Walters Photography
Mini loft
Mini loft
FUTURCRETFUTURCRET
diseño: Egue y Seta
Dachgeschossausbau A
Dachgeschossausbau A
UserUser
Entwurf: ARNOLD/WERNER mit Wiedemann Werkstätten. Fotos: Simon Burko Fotografie
Glass Wall House
Glass Wall House
Klopf ArchitectureKlopf Architecture
Klopf Architecture, Arterra Landscape Architects and Henry Calvert of Calvert Ventures Designed and built a new warm, modern, Eichler-inspired, open, indoor-outdoor home on a deeper-than-usual San Mateo Highlands property where an original Eichler house had burned to the ground. The owners wanted multi-generational living and larger spaces than the original home offered, but all parties agreed that the house should respect the neighborhood and blend in stylistically with the other Eichlers. At first the Klopf team considered re-using what little was left of the original home and expanding on it. But after discussions with the owner and builder, all parties agreed that the last few remaining elements of the house were not practical to re-use, so Klopf Architecture designed a new home that pushes the Eichler approach in new directions. One disadvantage of Eichler production homes is that the house designs were not optimized for each specific lot. A new custom home offered the team a chance to start over. In this case, a longer house that opens up sideways to the south fit the lot better than the original square-ish house that used to open to the rear (west). Accordingly, the Klopf team designed an L-shaped “bar” house with a large glass wall with large sliding glass doors that faces sideways instead of to the rear like a typical Eichler. This glass wall opens to a pool and landscaped yard designed by Arterra Landscape Architects. Driving by the house, one might assume at first glance it is an Eichler because of the horizontality, the overhanging flat roof eaves, the dark gray vertical siding, and orange solid panel front door, but the house is designed for the 21st Century and is not meant to be a “Likeler.” You won't see any posts and beams in this home. Instead, the ceiling decking is a western red cedar that covers over all the beams. Like Eichlers, this cedar runs continuously from inside to out, enhancing the indoor / outdoor feeling of the house, but unlike Eichlers it conceals a cavity for lighting, wiring, and insulation. Ceilings are higher, rooms are larger and more open, the master bathroom is light-filled and more generous, with a separate tub and shower and a separate toilet compartment, and there is plenty of storage. The garage even easily fits two of today's vehicles with room to spare. A massive 49-foot by 12-foot wall of glass and the continuity of materials from inside to outside enhance the inside-outside living concept, so the owners and their guests can flow freely from house to pool deck to BBQ to pool and back. During construction in the rough framing stage, Klopf thought the front of the house appeared too tall even though the house had looked right in the design renderings (probably because the house is uphill from the street). So Klopf Architecture paid the framer to change the roofline from how we had designed it to be lower along the front, allowing the home to blend in better with the neighborhood. One project goal was for people driving up the street to pass the home without immediately noticing there is an "imposter" on this lot, and making that change was essential to achieve that goal. This 2,606 square foot, 3 bedroom, 3 bathroom Eichler-inspired new house is located in San Mateo in the heart of the Silicon Valley. Klopf Architecture Project Team: John Klopf, AIA, Klara Kevane Landscape Architect: Arterra Landscape Architects Contractor: Henry Calvert of Calvert Ventures Photography ©2016 Mariko Reed Location: San Mateo, CA Year completed: 2016
LAXseries Wall Mounted Desk, 3X Wall Mounted Shelf, Platform Bed, and Storage He
LAXseries Wall Mounted Desk, 3X Wall Mounted Shelf, Platform Bed, and Storage He
MASHstudiosMASHstudios
LAXseries Wall Mounted Desk, 3X Wall Mounted Shelf, Platform Bed, and Storage Headboard. Items great for a bedroom or office. Spence and Lyda
Pining for Prefab
Pining for Prefab
Western Window SystemsWestern Window Systems
This Marmol Radziner–designed prefab house in Northern California features multi-slide doors from Western Window Systems.
400 Downd
400 Downd
Studio 360 Solutions IncStudio 360 Solutions Inc
Yannis Guillon Photographie Panotonic

Bedroom Design Ideas with Concrete Floors

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