Houzz Logo Print

Idées déco de façades de maisons victoriennes à deux étages et plus

Shingle style home drive court to entry elevation
Shingle style home drive court to entry elevation
Smith & Vansant Architects PCSmith & Vansant Architects PC
Rob Karosis Photography www.robkarosis.com
Réalisation d'une façade de maison victorienne en bois à deux étages et plus avec un toit à deux pans.
The Modern Victorian
The Modern Victorian
Hierarchy Architecture + Design, PLLCHierarchy Architecture + Design, PLLC
This Second Empire Victorian, was built with a unique, modern, open floor plan for an active young family. The challenge was to design a Transitional Victorian home, honoring the past and creating its own future story. A variety of windows, such as lancet arched, basket arched, round, and the twin half round infused whimsy and authenticity as a nod to the period. Dark blue shingles on the Mansard roof, characteristic of Second Empire Victorians, contrast the white exterior, while the quarter wrap around porch pays homage to the former home. Architect: T.J. Costello - Hierarchy Architecture + Design Photographer: Amanda Kirkpatrick
Newhall Classical
Newhall Classical
Geoffrey Mouen Architect, LLCGeoffrey Mouen Architect, LLC
Exemple d'une très grande façade de maison blanche victorienne en bois à deux étages et plus.
Hinckley House 3rd Floor Mansard Roof Historic Restoration
Hinckley House 3rd Floor Mansard Roof Historic Restoration
Killeen Studio ArchitectsKilleen Studio Architects
Exemple d'une grande façade de maison rouge victorienne en brique à deux étages et plus avec un toit plat.
Lakeview - Southport Corridor - Janssen
Lakeview - Southport Corridor - Janssen
Middlefork Development LLCMiddlefork Development LLC
This gracious property in the award-winning Blaine school district - and just off the Southport Corridor - marries an old world European design sensibility with contemporary technologies and unique artisan details. With more than 5,200 square feet, the home has four bedrooms and three bathrooms on the second floor, including a luxurious master suite with a private terrace. The house also boasts a distinct foyer; formal living and dining rooms designed in an open-plan concept; an expansive, eat-in, gourmet kitchen which is open to the first floor great room; lower-level family room; an attached, heated, 2-½ car garage with roof deck; a penthouse den and roof deck; and two additional rooms on the lower level which could be used as bedrooms, home offices or exercise rooms. The home, designed with an extra-wide floorplan, achieved through side yard relief, also has considerable, professionally-landscaped outdoor living spaces. This brick and limestone residence has been designed with family-functional experiences and classically proportioned spaces in mind. Highly-efficient environmental technologies have been integrated into the design and construction and the plan also takes into consideration the incorporation of all types of advanced communications systems. The home went under contract in less than 45 days in 2011. Jim Yochum
OCEANFRONT COTTAGE
OCEANFRONT COTTAGE
MarvinMarvin
Architect: Russ Tyson, Whitten Architects Photography By: Trent Bell Photography “Excellent expression of shingle style as found in southern Maine. Exciting without being at all overwrought or bombastic.” This shingle-style cottage in a small coastal village provides its owners a cherished spot on Maine’s rocky coastline. This home adapts to its immediate surroundings and responds to views, while keeping solar orientation in mind. Sited one block east of a home the owners had summered in for years, the new house conveys a commanding 180-degree view of the ocean and surrounding natural beauty, while providing the sense that the home had always been there. Marvin Ultimate Double Hung Windows stayed in line with the traditional character of the home, while also complementing the custom French doors in the rear. The specification of Marvin Window products provided confidence in the prevalent use of traditional double-hung windows on this highly exposed site. The ultimate clad double-hung windows were a perfect fit for the shingle-style character of the home. Marvin also built custom French doors that were a great fit with adjacent double-hung units. MARVIN PRODUCTS USED: Integrity Awning Window Integrity Casement Window Marvin Special Shape Window Marvin Ultimate Awning Window Marvin Ultimate Casement Window Marvin Ultimate Double Hung Window Marvin Ultimate Swinging French Door
Mansard Roof Georgian Colonial
Mansard Roof Georgian Colonial
RCCM, INC.RCCM, INC.
Réalisation d'une grande façade de maison victorienne en brique à deux étages et plus.
Riverfront Living
Riverfront Living
CMM Custom HomesCMM Custom Homes
http://www.dlauphoto.com/david/ David Lau
Exemple d'une grande façade de maison verte victorienne en bois à deux étages et plus avec un toit à deux pans.
WIMBLEDON FAMILY HOUSE
WIMBLEDON FAMILY HOUSE
STEPHEN FLETCHER ARCHITECTSSTEPHEN FLETCHER ARCHITECTS
A Victorian semi-detached house in Wimbledon has been remodelled and transformed into a modern family home, including extensive underpinning and extensions at lower ground floor level in order to form a large open-plan space. Photographer: Nick Smith
SHINGLE STYLE
SHINGLE STYLE
JMKA | architectsJMKA | architects
JEFF KAUFMAN
Idée de décoration pour une très grande façade de maison grise victorienne en bois à deux étages et plus avec un toit à quatre pans.
Elevations
Elevations
Jay Greene PhotographyJay Greene Photography
Jay Greene Photography
Aménagement d'une grande façade de maison victorienne en brique à deux étages et plus.
Drummond House
Drummond House
Elise Moore DesignElise Moore Design
Chris Zimmer
Cette image montre une façade de maison verte victorienne à deux étages et plus.
Willow Oak Residence
Willow Oak Residence
Moore Architects, PCMoore Architects, PC
Originally built in 1889 a short walk from the old East Falls Church rail station, the vaguely reminiscent gothic Victorian was a landmark in a neighborhood of late 19th century wood frame homes. The two story house had been changed many times over its 116 year life with most of the changes diminishing the style and integrity of the original home. Beginning during the mid-twentieth century, few of the changes could be seen as improvements. The wonderfully dominate front tower was obscured by a bathroom shed roof addition. The exterior skin was covered with asbestos siding, requiring the removal of any wood detailing projecting from its surface. Poorly designed diminutive additions were added to the rear creating small, awkward, low ceiling spaces that became irrelevant to the modern user. The house was in serious need of a significant renovation and restoration. A young family purchased the house and immediately realized the inadequacies; sub-par spaces, kitchen, bathrooms and systems. The program for this project was closely linked to aesthetics, function and budget. The program called for significantly enlarging the house with a major new rear addition taking the place of the former small additions. Critically important to the program was to not only protect the integrity of the original house, but to restore and expand the house in such a way that the addition would be seamless. The completed house had to fulfill all of the requirements of a modern house with significant living spaces, including reconfigured foyer, living room and dining room on the first floor and three modified bedrooms on the second floor. On the rear of the house a new addition created a new kitchen, family room, mud room, powder room and back stair hall. This new stair hall connected the new and existing first floor to a new basement recreation room below and a new master bedroom suite with laundry and second bathroom on the second floor. The entire exterior of the house was stripped to the original sheathing. New wood windows, wood lap siding, wall trim including roof eave and rake trim were installed. Each of the details on the exterior of the house matched the original details. This fact was confirmed by researching the house and studying turn-of-the-century photographs. The second floor addition was removed, facilitating the restoration of the four sided mansard roof tower. The final design for the house is strong but not overpowering. As a renovated house, the finished product fits the neighborhood, restoring its standing as a landmark, satisfying the owner’s needs for house and home. Hoachlander Davis Photography
Cedar Bluff
Cedar Bluff
SV DesignSV Design
Perched atop a bluff overlooking the Atlantic Ocean, this new residence adds a modern twist to the classic Shingle Style. The house is anchored to the land by stone retaining walls made entirely of granite taken from the site during construction. Clad almost entirely in cedar shingles, the house will weather to a classic grey. Photo Credit: Blind Dog Studio
New Orleans Estate
New Orleans Estate
McDugald-SteeleMcDugald-Steele
Idée de décoration pour une grande façade de maison victorienne en bois à deux étages et plus.
The Modern Victorian
The Modern Victorian
Hierarchy Architecture + Design, PLLCHierarchy Architecture + Design, PLLC
This Second Empire Victorian, was built with a unique, modern, open floor plan for an active young family. The challenge was to design a Transitional Victorian home, honoring the past and creating its own future story. A variety of windows, such as lancet arched, basket arched, round, and the twin half round infused whimsy and authenticity as a nod to the period. Dark blue shingles on the Mansard roof, characteristic of Second Empire Victorians, contrast the white exterior, while the quarter wrap around porch pays homage to the former home. Architect: T.J. Costello - Hierarchy Architecture + Design Photographer: Amanda Kirkpatrick
MELROSE VICTORIAN
MELROSE VICTORIAN
b Architecture Studiob Architecture Studio
WILLIAM HORNE
Idées déco pour un escalier extérieur victorien de taille moyenne.
Rear Elevation
Rear Elevation
marshall sabatini | architecture+marshall sabatini | architecture+
Photo: Tom Crane
Idée de décoration pour une grande façade de maison grise victorienne en bois à deux étages et plus avec un toit à deux pans.
Victorian Facade Restoration
Victorian Facade Restoration
Craig O'Connell ArchitectureCraig O'Connell Architecture
Facade improvement to replace 1950s stucco with traditional Victorian exterior, paint and details.
Réalisation d'une grande façade de maison verte victorienne en bois à deux étages et plus avec un toit à deux pans.
Lake Front Home in NH
Lake Front Home in NH
Bonin Architects &  AssociatesBonin Architects & Associates
The exterior of the home is designed to complement the surrounding architecture in Blodgett Landing in Newbury, NH, while the interior boasts a more contemporary atmosphere. Architectural design by Bonin Architects & Associates. Photo by William N. Fish.

Idées déco de façades de maisons victoriennes à deux étages et plus

1
France
Personnaliser mon expérience à l'aide de cookies

Houzz utilise des cookies et d'autres technologies de suivi similaires pour personnaliser mon expérience utilisateur, me proposer du contenu pertinent et améliorer ses produits et services. En cliquant sur « Accepter », j'accepte l'utilisation des cookies telle qu'elle est décrite plus en détail dans la Politique d'Utilisation des Cookies de Houzz. Je peux rejeter les cookies non essentiels en cliquant sur « Tout rejeter » ou « Gérer mes préférences ».