Dining Room Design Ideas with Blue Walls and Brown Walls

LARGE CONTEMPORARY FAMILY HOME
LARGE CONTEMPORARY FAMILY HOME
Bagnato Architecture & InteriorsBagnato Architecture & Interiors
The meals area is part of an open plan living, kitchen meals area the opens onto a a covered patio. The floor tiles are Walnut travertine stone tiles.
Dining Room #2
Dining Room #2
Brian BendaBrian Benda
Casual dining room that connects to open living room and kitchen. Dining room table is from Pottery Barn's Benchwright line. Drapery and roman shades are custom made. Beams in ceiling are rough sawn and stained a custom blend to match other wood tones. Windows and sliding door to covered back porch are from Pella.
Transitional Downtown Abode, Full Home Design
Transitional Downtown Abode, Full Home Design
UserUser
The dining room is framed by a metallic silver ceiling and molding alongside red and orange striped draperies paired with woven wood blinds. A contemporary nude painting hangs above a pair of vintage ivory lamps atop a vintage orange buffet. Black rattan chairs with red leather seats surround a transitional stained trestle table, and the teal walls set off the room’s dark walnut wood floors and aqua blue hemp and wool rug.
Celadon Studio Portfolio
Celadon Studio Portfolio
Celadon Studio and Fine ArtCeladon Studio and Fine Art
All Rights Reserved. Copyright 2012 Celadon Studio and Fine Art.
Dining Room
Dining Room
UserUser
Every detail has been thought through in this ornate and elegant dining room. The artwork is highlighted by custom art lighting. Deep blues combine with neutral colors, including a custom made round area rug beneath the formal dining table that is surrounded by upholstered chairs. From the cut out ceiling detail to the parquet wood floor this room is elegance at its finest. Interior Design by: Details a Design Firm 22549 B East Bluff Dr. #425 Newport Beach, Ca Phone: 949-716-1880 Construction by: Spinnaker Development 428 32nd Street Newport Beach, CA (949) 544-5800
Chi Town Meets Cali Cool
Chi Town Meets Cali Cool
Midcity Design GroupMidcity Design Group
Bold, color-filled dining room buffer, upholstered dining chairs BLue walls Oversized art prints
Continental Divide - Colorado Modern Mountain Home Dining Room with Fireplace
Continental Divide - Colorado Modern Mountain Home Dining Room with Fireplace
Vetter ArchitectsVetter Architects
The owners requested that their home harmonize with the spirit of the surrounding Colorado mountain setting and enhance their outdoor recreational lifestyle - while reflecting their contemporary architectural tastes. The site was burdened with a myriad of strict design criteria enforced by the neighborhood covenants and architectural review board. Creating a distinct design challenge, the covenants included a narrow interpretation of a “mountain style” home which established predetermined roof pitches, glazing percentages and material palettes - at direct odds with the client‘s vision of a flat-roofed, glass, “contemporary” home. Our solution finds inspiration and opportunities within the site covenant’s strict definitions. It promotes and celebrates the client’s outdoor lifestyle and resolves the definition of a contemporary “mountain style” home by reducing the architecture to its most basic vernacular forms and relying upon local materials. The home utilizes a simple base, middle and top that echoes the surrounding mountains and vegetation. The massing takes its cues from the prevalent lodgepole pine trees that grow at the mountain’s high altitudes. These pine trees have a distinct growth pattern, highlighted by a single vertical trunk and a peaked, densely foliated growth zone above a sparse base. This growth pattern is referenced by placing the wood-clad body of the home at the second story above an open base composed of wood posts and glass. A simple peaked roof rests lightly atop the home - visually floating above a triangular glass transom. The home itself is neatly inserted amongst an existing grove of lodgepole pines and oriented to take advantage of panoramic views of the adjacent meadow and Continental Divide beyond. The main functions of the house are arranged into public and private areas and this division is made apparent on the home’s exterior. Two large roof forms, clad in pre-patinated zinc, are separated by a sheltering central deck - which signals the main entry to the home. At this connection, the roof deck is opened to allow a cluster of aspen trees to grow – further reinforcing nature as an integral part of arrival. Outdoor living spaces are provided on all levels of the house and are positioned to take advantage of sunrise and sunset moments. The distinction between interior and exterior space is blurred via the use of large expanses of glass. The dry stacked stone base and natural cedar cladding both reappear within the home’s interior spaces. This home offers a unique solution to the client’s requests while satisfying the design requirements of the neighborhood covenants. The house provides a variety of indoor and outdoor living spaces that can be utilized in all seasons. Most importantly, the house takes its cues directly from its natural surroundings and local building traditions to become a prototype solution for the “modern mountain house”. Overview Ranch Creek Ranch Winter Park, Colorado Completion Date October, 2007 Services Architecture, Interior Design, Landscape Architecture
Traditional Dining Room Settee
Traditional Dining Room Settee
Hive HomeHive Home
Blue and white dining room with colorful settee and bench. Grasscloth, sisal, cane and velvet work together to create a layered textured room.

Dining Room Design Ideas with Blue Walls and Brown Walls

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