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Idées déco de façades de maisons

Sugar Shack
Sugar Shack
Grove Park Fine HomesGrove Park Fine Homes
Grove Park Fine Homes, Inc. Design/Build L Mayes Designs Leeann Mayes Woeltjen Photography www.woeltjenphotography.com
Idées déco pour une façade de maison classique de plain-pied.
Exterior Wild Dunes Remodel
Exterior Wild Dunes Remodel
Sea Island Builders LLCSea Island Builders LLC
Cette photo montre une grande façade de maison bord de mer à un étage.
Classic Shingle Style Residence
Classic Shingle Style Residence
Jones & Boer Architects, Inc.Jones & Boer Architects, Inc.
Walter Smalling Jr. photographer
Réalisation d'une très grande façade de maison victorienne en bois à un étage.
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Bellevue New Construction
Bellevue New Construction
Seattle Staged to Sell and Design LLCSeattle Staged to Sell and Design LLC
Allie Leporesti
Cette photo montre une façade de maison chic.
Russet
Russet
splyce designsplyce design
Photography by Ivan Hunter
Aménagement d'une façade de maison moderne en verre à deux étages et plus avec un toit plat.
GMA
GMA
Michael Lowry PhotographyMichael Lowry Photography
Michael Lowry Photography
Idées déco pour une façade de maison classique en bois à un étage.
Turkey Farm
Turkey Farm
Akar ARchiTectureAkar ARchiTecture
Farshid Assassi
Réalisation d'une très grande façade de maison blanche design en stuc de plain-pied avec un toit à deux pans et un toit en métal.
Sinclair
Sinclair
Golden Isles Custom Homes, LLCGolden Isles Custom Homes, LLC
Idées déco pour une façade de maison classique.
Sinclair
Sinclair
Golden Isles Custom Homes, LLCGolden Isles Custom Homes, LLC
Inspiration pour une façade de maison traditionnelle en bois à un étage.
7RR-Ecohome
7RR-Ecohome
Thomas Roszak Architecture, LLCThomas Roszak Architecture, LLC
Photo credit: Scott McDonald @ Hedrich Blessing 7RR-Ecohome: The design objective was to build a house for a couple recently married who both had kids from previous marriages. How to bridge two families together? The design looks forward in terms of how people live today. The home is an experiment in transparency and solid form; removing borders and edges from outside to inside the house, and to really depict “flowing and endless space”. The house floor plan is derived by pushing and pulling the house’s form to maximize the backyard and minimize the public front yard while welcoming the sun in key rooms by rotating the house 45-degrees to true north. The angular form of the house is a result of the family’s program, the zoning rules, the lot’s attributes, and the sun’s path. We wanted to construct a house that is smart and efficient in terms of construction and energy, both in terms of the building and the user. We could tell a story of how the house is built in terms of the constructability, structure and enclosure, with a nod to Japanese wood construction in the method in which the siding is installed and the exposed interior beams are placed in the double height space. We engineered the house to be smart which not only looks modern but acts modern; every aspect of user control is simplified to a digital touch button, whether lights, shades, blinds, HVAC, communication, audio, video, or security. We developed a planning module based on a 6-foot square room size and a 6-foot wide connector called an interstitial space for hallways, bathrooms, stairs and mechanical, which keeps the rooms pure and uncluttered. The house is 6,200 SF of livable space, plus garage and basement gallery for a total of 9,200 SF. A large formal foyer celebrates the entry and opens up to the living, dining, kitchen and family rooms all focused on the rear garden. The east side of the second floor is the Master wing and a center bridge connects it to the kid’s wing on the west. Second floor terraces and sunscreens provide views and shade in this suburban setting. The playful mathematical grid of the house in the x, y and z axis also extends into the layout of the trees and hard-scapes, all centered on a suburban one-acre lot. Many green attributes were designed into the home; Ipe wood sunscreens and window shades block out unwanted solar gain in summer, but allow winter sun in. Patio door and operable windows provide ample opportunity for natural ventilation throughout the open floor plan. Minimal windows on east and west sides to reduce heat loss in winter and unwanted gains in summer. Open floor plan and large window expanse reduces lighting demands and maximizes available daylight. Skylights provide natural light to the basement rooms. Durable, low-maintenance exterior materials include stone, ipe wood siding and decking, and concrete roof pavers. Design is based on a 2' planning grid to minimize construction waste. Basement foundation walls and slab are highly insulated. FSC-certified walnut wood flooring was used. Light colored concrete roof pavers to reduce cooling loads by as much as 15%. 2x6 framing allows for more insulation and energy savings. Super efficient windows have low-E argon gas filled units, and thermally insulated aluminum frames. Permeable brick and stone pavers reduce the site’s storm-water runoff. Countertops use recycled composite materials. Energy-Star rated furnaces and smart thermostats are located throughout the house to minimize duct runs and avoid energy loss. Energy-Star rated boiler that heats up both radiant floors and domestic hot water. Low-flow toilets and plumbing fixtures are used to conserve water usage. No VOC finish options and direct venting fireplaces maintain a high interior air quality. Smart home system controls lighting, HVAC, and shades to better manage energy use. Plumbing runs through interior walls reducing possibilities of heat loss and freezing problems. A large food pantry was placed next to kitchen to reduce trips to the grocery store. Home office reduces need for automobile transit and associated CO2 footprint. Plan allows for aging in place, with guest suite than can become the master suite, with no need to move as family members mature.
Maureen Residence
Maureen Residence
Rill ArchitectsRill Architects
Rill Architects (Kay Kim)
Cette image montre une façade de maison grise craftsman avec un revêtement mixte.
Hill Country Christmas
Hill Country Christmas
Dawn Hearn Interior DesignDawn Hearn Interior Design
Front courtyard features natural wreaths on the front doors. Tre Dunham with Fine Focus Photography
Cette image montre une façade de maison rustique en pierre.
Bird Rock, San Diego CA
Bird Rock, San Diego CA
Doug Simon ARCHITECTUREDoug Simon ARCHITECTURE
Photo by Ed Golich
Aménagement d'une façade de maison bleue classique en bois de plain-pied et de taille moyenne avec un toit à quatre pans.
Baulinder Haus
Baulinder Haus
HufftHufft
Baulinder Haus is located just a few houses down from a landmark Kansas City area home designed by Bauhaus architect Marcel Breuer. Baulinder Haus draws inspiration from the details of the neighboring home. Vertically oriented wood siding, simple forms, and overhanging masses—these were part of Breuer’s modernist palette. The house’s form consists of a series of stacked boxes, with public spaces on the ground level and private spaces in the boxes above. The boxes are oriented in a U-shaped plan to create a generous private courtyard. This was designed as an extension of the interior living space, blurring the boundaries between indoors and outdoors. Floor-to-ceiling south facing windows in the courtyard are shaded by the overhanging second floor above to prohibit solar heat gain, but allow for passive solar heating in the winter. Other sustainable elements of the home include a geothermal heat pump HVAC system, energy efficient windows and sprayed foam insulation. The exterior wood is a vertical shiplap siding milled from FSC certified Machiche. Baulinder Haus was designed to meet and exceed requirements put forward by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for their Indoor airPLUS qualified homes, and is working toward Energy Star qualification. Machiche and steel screening elements provide depth and texture to front facade.
Hurricane-Resistant Home on Pilings (Stilt House) - Home Front View
Hurricane-Resistant Home on Pilings (Stilt House) - Home Front View
TOPSIDER HOMESTOPSIDER HOMES
With 2,000 sq. ft. of open living space with panoramic water views, this elevated hurricane-resistant home (designed and engineered by Topsider) was built after Hurricane Katrina destroyed the original home. Visit http://www.topsiderhomes.com/piling-pier-stilt-house-hurricane-home-plans.php for more information.
Country Residence
Country Residence
Erskine Associates LLCErskine Associates LLC
Cette photo montre une grande façade de maison grise chic à un étage avec un revêtement mixte et un toit à deux pans.
Exterior
Exterior
THINK Architecture, Inc.THINK Architecture, Inc.
Inspiration pour une façade de maison chalet en bois.
Hilltop House
Hilltop House
Sellars Lathrop Architects, llcSellars Lathrop Architects, llc
michael biondo, photographer
Cette image montre une grande façade de maison multicolore design à un étage avec un revêtement mixte, un toit à deux pans et un toit en métal.

Idées déco de façades de maisons

House on Holdridge
House on Holdridge
Murphy & Co. DesignMurphy & Co. Design
Photo by Susan Gilmore Photography
Cette photo montre une façade de maison victorienne en pierre avec un toit à croupette.
98
France
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