Hallway Design Ideas with Concrete Floors

Garden Loft
Garden Loft
Sullivan Building & Design GroupSullivan Building & Design Group
Modern Loft designed and built by Sullivan Building & Design Group. Custom sliding barn door built by Cider Press Woodworks. Photo credit: Kathleen Connally
CSTB HOUSE
CSTB HOUSE
Tommaso Giunchi ArchitettiTommaso Giunchi Architetti
dalla giorno vista del corridoio verso zona notte. Nella pannellatura della boiserie a tutta altezza è nascosta una porta a bilico che separa gli ambienti. Pavimento zona ingresso, cucina e corridoio in resina
Penthouse Residence
Penthouse Residence
UserUser
The Clients contacted Cecil Baker + Partners to reconfigure and remodel the top floor of a prominent Philadelphia high-rise into an urban pied-a-terre. The forty-five story apartment building, overlooking Washington Square Park and its surrounding neighborhoods, provided a modern shell for this truly contemporary renovation. Originally configured as three penthouse units, the 8,700 sf interior, as well as 2,500 square feet of terrace space, was to become a single residence with sweeping views of the city in all directions. The Client’s mission was to create a city home for collecting and displaying contemporary glass crafts. Their stated desire was to cast an urban home that was, in itself, a gallery. While they enjoy a very vital family life, this home was targeted to their urban activities - entertainment being a central element. The living areas are designed to be open and to flow into each other, with pockets of secondary functions. At large social events, guests feel free to access all areas of the penthouse, including the master bedroom suite. A main gallery was created in order to house unique, travelling art shows. Stemming from their desire to entertain, the penthouse was built around the need for elaborate food preparation. Cooking would be visible from several entertainment areas with a “show” kitchen, provided for their renowned chef. Secondary preparation and cleaning facilities were tucked away. The architects crafted a distinctive residence that is framed around the gallery experience, while also incorporating softer residential moments. Cecil Baker + Partners embraced every element of the new penthouse design beyond those normally associated with an architect’s sphere, from all material selections, furniture selections, furniture design, and art placement. Barry Halkin and Todd Mason Photography
House in Santa Lucia Preserve
House in Santa Lucia Preserve
Cathy Schwabe ArchitectureCathy Schwabe Architecture
View through clerestory hall with living room and then screened porch on right, room divider to kitchen on left, study at end of hall. Cathy Schwabe Architecture. Photograph by David Wakely.
Bell Canyon Residence
Bell Canyon Residence
Hsu McCulloughHsu McCullough
A 60-foot long central passage carves a path from the aforementioned Great Room and Foyer to the private Bedroom Suites: This hallway is capped by an enclosed shower garden - accessed from the Primary Bath - open to the sky above and the south lawn beyond. In lieu of using recessed lights or wall sconces, the architect’s dreamt of a clever architectural detail that offers diffused daylighting / moonlighting of the home’s main corridor. The detail was formed by pealing the low-pitched gabled roof back at the high ridge line, opening the 60-foot long hallway to the sky via a series of seven obscured Solatube skylight systems and a sharp-angled drywall trim edge: Inspired by a James Turrell art installation, this detail directs the natural light (as well as light from an obscured continuous LED strip when desired) to the East corridor wall via the 6-inch wide by 60-foot long cove shaping the glow uninterrupted: An elegant distillation of Hsu McCullough's painting of interior spaces with various qualities of light - direct and diffused.
vanCollier house
vanCollier house
Catherine Nguyen PhotographyCatherine Nguyen Photography
Antiqued glass mirrors from Mexico, vanCollier gingko console table Catherine Nguyen Photography
Hill Country Residence
Hill Country Residence
Cornerstone ArchitectsCornerstone Architects
Nestled into sloping topography, the design of this home allows privacy from the street while providing unique vistas throughout the house and to the surrounding hill country and downtown skyline. Layering rooms with each other as well as circulation galleries, insures seclusion while allowing stunning downtown views. The owners' goals of creating a home with a contemporary flow and finish while providing a warm setting for daily life was accomplished through mixing warm natural finishes such as stained wood with gray tones in concrete and local limestone. The home's program also hinged around using both passive and active green features. Sustainable elements include geothermal heating/cooling, rainwater harvesting, spray foam insulation, high efficiency glazing, recessing lower spaces into the hillside on the west side, and roof/overhang design to provide passive solar coverage of walls and windows. The resulting design is a sustainably balanced, visually pleasing home which reflects the lifestyle and needs of the clients. Photography by Andrew Pogue
Hallway with Wood Flat-Panel Cabinets
Hallway with Wood Flat-Panel Cabinets
ULFBUILTULFBUILT
In this hallway, the wood materials used for walls and built-in cabinets give a fresh and warm look. While the dry plant and ombre gray wall create a focal point that accents simplicity and beauty. Built by ULFBUILT - General contractor of custom homes in Vail and Beaver Creek. May your home be your place of love, joy, compassion and peace. Contact us today to learn more.
Grafton Project
Grafton Project
Peter A. Sellar - Architectural PhotographerPeter A. Sellar - Architectural Photographer
Photography: Peter A. Sellar / www.photoklik.com ------------------ Conversion Design: Cliff Smith of Augustus Jones http://augustusjones.com/

Hallway Design Ideas with Concrete Floors

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