Green, Purple Exterior Design Ideas
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Elite Design Group
This amazing Craftsman Bungalow house plan is an entertainer’s dream, thanks to the gourmet kitchen with walk-in pantry, breakfast nook, formal dining area and deck. The downstairs master suite features a striking bath area and walk-in closet. Upstairs you’ll find three suites and a large bonus room. The garage features 2-car dimensions perfect for today’s big SUVs and trucks. Enjoy the evening sitting in a rocker on the front porch.
First Floor Heated: 1,981
Master Suite: Down
Second Floor Heated: 1,449
Baths: 3.5
Third Floor Heated:
Main Floor Ceiling: 10′
Total Heated Area: 3,430
Specialty Rooms: Bonus Room
Garages: Two
Bedrooms: Four
Footprint: 53′-2″ x 63′-8″
EDG Plan Collection
Jacob Lilley Architects
Jacob Lilley Architects
Location: Concord, MA, USA
The renovation to this classic Victorian House included and an expansion of the current kitchen, family room and breakfast area. These changes allowed us to improve the existing rear elevation and create a new backyard patio. A new, detached two-car carriage house was designed to compliment the main house and provide some much needed storage.
Kipnis Architecture + Planning
The house had a full gut rehab and addition which brought it back to life as well as expanded it for a growing young family.
New siding, thin and flush on the first floor, and larger shingled styled on the upper floor, sits on a brick base. The divided lites on the 1st and 2nd floors are a 5 over 1 pattern with an arched top, while they are 2 over 3 or 4 in a traditional style at the attic level.
Dark copper downspouts and gutters relate to the brick base color and play off of the dark green siding and cream trim.
The house won an Evanston Preservation Award and was granted an Illinois Tax Freeze for the work on its historic preservation.
Photo Credit: Kipnis Architecture + Planning
Designer's Edge Kitchen & Bath
This West Linn 1970's split level home received a complete exterior and interior remodel. The design included removing the existing roof to vault the interior ceilings and increase the pitch of the roof. Custom quarried stone was used on the base of the home and new siding applied above a belly band for a touch of charm and elegance. The new barrel vaulted porch and the landscape design with it's curving walkway now invite you in. Photographer: Benson Images and Designer's Edge Kitchen and Bath
CLB Architects
The Peaks View residence is sited near Wilson, Wyoming, in a grassy meadow, adjacent to the Teton mountain range. The design solution for the project had to satisfy two conflicting goals: the finished project must fit seamlessly into a neighborhood with distinctly conservative design guidelines while satisfying the owners desire to create a unique home with roots in the modern idiom.
Within these constraints, the architect created an assemblage of building volumes to break down the scale of the 6,500 square foot program. A pair of two-story gabled structures present a traditional face to the neighborhood, while the single-story living pavilion, with its expansive shed roof, tilts up to recognize views and capture daylight for the primary living spaces. This trio of buildings wrap around a south-facing courtyard, a warm refuge for outdoor living during the short summer season in Wyoming. Broad overhangs, articulated in wood, taper to thin steel “brim” that protects the buildings from harsh western weather. The roof of the living pavilion extends to create a covered outdoor extension for the main living space. The cast-in-place concrete chimney and site walls anchor the composition of forms to the flat site. The exterior is clad primarily in cedar siding; two types were used to create pattern, texture and depth in the elevations.
While the building forms and exterior materials conform to the design guidelines and fit within the context of the neighborhood, the interiors depart to explore a well-lit, refined and warm character. Wood, plaster and a reductive approach to detailing and materials complete the interior expression. Display for a Kimono was deliberately incorporated into the entry sequence. Its influence on the interior can be seen in the delicate stair screen and the language for the millwork which is conceived as simple wood containers within spaces. Ample glazing provides excellent daylight and a connection to the site.
Photos: Matthew Millman
Warline Painting Ltd.
One of Vancouver's most beautiful streets is West 10th Avenue. Warline Painting completed the exterior painting of this fabulous house in the summer of 2012.
Photos by Ina Van Tonder.
Moore Architects, PC
The Cleveland Park neighborhood of Washington, D.C boasts some of the most beautiful and well maintained bungalows of the late 19th century. Residential streets are distinguished by the most significant craftsman icon, the front porch.
Porter Street Bungalow was different. The stucco walls on the right and left side elevations were the first indication of an original bungalow form. Yet the swooping roof, so characteristic of the period, was terminated at the front by a first floor enclosure that had almost no penetrations and presented an unwelcoming face. Original timber beams buried within the enclosed mass provided the
only fenestration where they nudged through. The house,
known affectionately as ‘the bunker’, was in serious need of
a significant renovation and restoration.
A young couple purchased the house over 10 years ago as
a first home. As their family grew and professional lives
matured the inadequacies of the small rooms and out of date systems had to be addressed. The program called to significantly enlarge the house with a major new rear addition. The completed house had to fulfill all of the requirements of a modern house: a reconfigured larger living room, new shared kitchen and breakfast room and large family room on the first floor and three modified bedrooms and master suite on the second floor.
Front photo by Hoachlander Davis Photography.
All other photos by Prakash Patel.
Architectural Collaborative
Painted fiber cement siding, concrete block and accents of stained cypress keep the exterior of this courtyard style home contemporary, durable and affordable.
TruexCullins Architecture + Interior Design
To view other green projects by TruexCullins Architecture + Interior Design visit www.truexcullins.com
Photographer: Jim Westphalen
Clawson Architects, LLC
Rear exterior- every building has multiple sides. with the number of back yard bar-b-ques, and the rear entrance into the mud room being the entry of choice for the owners, the rear façade of this home was equally as important as the front of the house. large overhangs, brackets, exposed rafter tails and a pergola all add interest to the design and providing a nice backdrop for entertaining and hanging out in the yard.
Jamee Parish Architects, LLC
This home is a small cottage that used to be a ranch. We remodeled the entire first floor and added a second floor above.
Green, Purple Exterior Design Ideas
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