Dining Room Design Ideas with Vaulted and Wood Walls
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Beth Levine Architect, Inc.
This design brought meaning and focus to the house by making the dining room into the heart of the home, like a quaint old cabin with which the new house grew around.
Foley Hillestad Architecture
This was a complete interior and exterior renovation of a 6,500sf 1980's single story ranch. The original home had an interior pool that was removed and replace with a widely spacious and highly functioning kitchen. Stunning results with ample amounts of natural light and wide views the surrounding landscape. A lovely place to live.
Nikki Levy Interiors
A dining room that is the heart of the home. Open for all to use, but still so pulled together and sophisticated. Outdoors / Indoors has never been more inviting
Interior Changes home design & consulting
The view from the dining space through the entry and kitchen reveals a mixture of natural elements that combine and balance the volume of the open concept.
John Patrick Cunningham / Architect
The public area is split into 4 overlapping spaces, centrally separated by the kitchen. Here is a view of the dining hall, looking out onto the farm.
Brad Cox, Architect, Inc.
The epitome of indoor-outdoor living, not just one but *two* walls of this home consist primarily of accordion doors which fully open the public areas of the house to the back yard. A flush transition ensures steady footing while walking in and out of the house.
Nflux Coatings
Farmhouse dining room with a robin egg metallic glaze sky mural on ceiling, whitewashed walls, and cabinets with red paint and dark cherry glaze finish.
Ralph Kent / architect
The Black Barn is located between Milford-on-Sea and Barton-on-Sea in Hampshire. It is surrounded by open countryside and benefits from a spring-fed pond and views across the Solent to the Isle of Wight. The combination of super-insulation and extensive on-site renewables and a large vegetable garden makes this a quasi off-grid house. Consent for this replacement dwelling on this sensitive site was obtained in 2021 by working closely with Jerry Davies Planning Consultancy.
The rural setting was the driver for the ‘agricultural vernacular’ architectural forms. The barn volumes are clad in highly durable black corrugated Eternit fibre-cement panels, the colour referencing the history of the previous house on this site. Prior to World War II the previous house had been painted white, which made it a distinctive navigational landmark for the Luftwaffe. The house was painted black during the war and became known as “Black Cottage”.
The south-east facing roof to the house is fitted with 44No. 335-watt Vridian Clearline Fusion in-roof solar panels with integrated VELUX roof lights. This 14.7kWp array provides the electricity for the ground source heat pump, day-to-day usage and electric vehicle charging with the surplus being stored in a 13.5kW Tesla Powerwall 2 home battery. The garage building has a further 16No. panels providing an additional 5.3kWp output.
As a replacement dwelling in the green belt the gross internal area of the new house was limited to a maximum of 130% of the area of the original two-storey house. Ancillary guest accommodation is provided by virtue of Section 13 of the 1968 Caravan Act which allows for a mobile home of a maximum length of 20 metres, maximum width of 6.8 metres and maximum internal height of 3.05 metres (the annexe does not benefit from a vaulted ceiling in the way that the main house does). The garage building was granted consent as an outbuilding as part of the planning application and provides storage for equipment to tend to the 5.5 acre (2.26ha) site, part of which has been seeded to become a wildflower meadow. The front of the house is arranged as a vegetable garden / potager.
Dining Room Design Ideas with Vaulted and Wood Walls
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