Idées déco de grandes façades de maisons métalliques
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Koch Architects
Exterior of modern farmhouse style home, clad in corrugated grey steel with wall lighting, offset gable roof with chimney, detached guest house and connecting breezeway. Photo by Tory Taglio Photography
Northerly
The matte black standing seam material wraps up and over the house like a blanket, only exposing the ends of the house where Kebony vertical tongue and groove siding and glass fill in the recessed exterior walls.
KRÄM Construction & Design
Idée de décoration pour une grande façade de maison métallique et rouge à un étage avec un toit en métal.
Dan Nelson, Designs Northwest Architects
View from lake. Photography by Lucas Henning.
Réalisation d'une grande façade de maison grise et métallique design à deux étages et plus avec un toit en appentis et un toit en métal.
Réalisation d'une grande façade de maison grise et métallique design à deux étages et plus avec un toit en appentis et un toit en métal.
Mell Lawrence Architects
galvanized corrugated metal siding, galvallume snap lock roof, limestone base, painted pine, wood windows
Exemple d'une grande façade de maison métallique et grise tendance à deux étages et plus.
Exemple d'une grande façade de maison métallique et grise tendance à deux étages et plus.
WA Design Architects
Cette photo montre une grande façade de maison métallique et grise bord de mer à un étage avec un toit plat.
Vandervort Architects
Réalisation d'une grande façade de maison métallique design à un étage avec un toit en appentis.
Three Little Pigs Colour & Design
Photo by Thomas Dalhoff
Cette image montre une grande façade de maison grise et métallique minimaliste à un étage avec un toit à quatre pans et un toit en métal.
Cette image montre une grande façade de maison grise et métallique minimaliste à un étage avec un toit à quatre pans et un toit en métal.
C. Kairouz Architects
Restored original heritage home with modern extension at the rear.
Réalisation d'une grande façade de maison métallique et noire design à un étage avec un toit gris.
Réalisation d'une grande façade de maison métallique et noire design à un étage avec un toit gris.
Audrey Matlock Architect
The swimming pool sits between the main living wing and the upper level family wing. The master bedroom has a private terrace with forest views. Below is a pool house sheathed with zinc panels with an outdoor shower facing the forest.
Photographer - Peter Aaron
Martins Camisuli Architects
This terrace house had remained empty for over two years and was in need of a complete renovation. Our clients wanted a beautiful home with the best potential energy performance for a period property.
The property was extended on ground floor to increase the kitchen and dining room area, maximize the overall building potential within the current Local Authority planning constraints.
The attic space was extended under permitted development to create a master bedroom with dressing room and en-suite bathroom.
The palette of materials is a warm combination of natural finishes, textures and beautiful colours that combine to create a tranquil and welcoming living environment.
Stebnitz Builders, Inc.
This 2,500 square-foot home, combines the an industrial-meets-contemporary gives its owners the perfect place to enjoy their rustic 30- acre property. Its multi-level rectangular shape is covered with corrugated red, black, and gray metal, which is low-maintenance and adds to the industrial feel.
Encased in the metal exterior, are three bedrooms, two bathrooms, a state-of-the-art kitchen, and an aging-in-place suite that is made for the in-laws. This home also boasts two garage doors that open up to a sunroom that brings our clients close nature in the comfort of their own home.
The flooring is polished concrete and the fireplaces are metal. Still, a warm aesthetic abounds with mixed textures of hand-scraped woodwork and quartz and spectacular granite counters. Clean, straight lines, rows of windows, soaring ceilings, and sleek design elements form a one-of-a-kind, 2,500 square-foot home
Jobe Corral Architects
Photo by Casey Woods
Exemple d'une grande façade de maison métallique et marron tendance à deux étages et plus.
Exemple d'une grande façade de maison métallique et marron tendance à deux étages et plus.
EWERT LEAF PTY LTD
Exemple d'une grande façade de maison métallique et grise tendance à un étage avec un toit plat.
Birdseye Design
Réalisation d'une grande façade de maison métallique et noire design à un étage avec un toit plat et un toit en métal.
User
Réalisation d'une grande façade de maison métallique et grise design à un étage avec un toit plat et un toit végétal.
Nic Owen Architects
Rhiannon Slatter
Cette image montre une grande façade de maison métallique et noire design à un étage.
Cette image montre une grande façade de maison métallique et noire design à un étage.
Northwestern Landscape & Design
Réalisation d'une grande façade de maison métallique et bleue design à un étage avec un toit en appentis et un toit en shingle.
Visbeen Architects
Featuring a classic H-shaped plan and minimalist details, the Winston was designed with the modern family in mind. This home carefully balances a sleek and uniform façade with more contemporary elements. This balance is noticed best when looking at the home on axis with the front or rear doors. Simple lap siding serve as a backdrop to the careful arrangement of windows and outdoor spaces. Stepping through a pair of natural wood entry doors gives way to sweeping vistas through the living and dining rooms. Anchoring the left side of the main level, and on axis with the living room, is a large white kitchen island and tiled range surround. To the right, and behind the living rooms sleek fireplace, is a vertical corridor that grants access to the upper level bedrooms, main level master suite, and lower level spaces. Serving as backdrop to this vertical corridor is a floor to ceiling glass display room for a sizeable wine collection. Set three steps down from the living room and through an articulating glass wall, the screened porch is enclosed by a retractable screen system that allows the room to be heated during cold nights. In all rooms, preferential treatment is given to maximize exposure to the rear yard, making this a perfect lakefront home.
Studio Bua
The Guesthouse Nýp at Skarðsströnd is situated on a former sheep farm overlooking the Breiðafjörður Nature Reserve in western Iceland. Originally constructed as a farmhouse in 1936, the building was deserted in the 1970s, slowly falling into disrepair before the new owners eventually began rebuilding in 2001. Since 2006, it has come to be known as a cultural hub of sorts, playing host to various exhibitions, lectures, courses and workshops.
The brief was to conceive a design that would make better use of the existing facilities, allowing for more multifunctional spaces for various cultural activities. This not only involved renovating the main house, but also rebuilding and enlarging the adjoining sheep-shed. Nýp’s first guests arrived in 2013 and where accommodated in two of the four bedrooms in the remodelled farmhouse. The reimagined sheep shed added a further three ensuite guestrooms with a separate entrance. This offers the owners greater flexibility, with the possibility of hosting larger events in the main house without disturbing guests. The new entrance hall and connection to the farmhouse has been given generous dimensions allowing it to double as an exhibition space.
The main house is divided vertically in two volumes with the original living quarters to the south and a barn for hay storage to the North. Bua inserted an additional floor into the barn to create a raised event space with a series of new openings capturing views to the mountains and the fjord. Driftwood, salvaged from a neighbouring beach, has been used as columns to support the new floor. Steel handrails, timber doors and beams have been salvaged from building sites in Reykjavik old town.
The ruins of concrete foundations have been repurposed to form a structured kitchen garden. A steel and polycarbonate structure has been bolted to the top of one concrete bay to create a tall greenhouse, also used by the client as an extra sitting room in the warmer months.
Staying true to Nýp’s ethos of sustainability and slow tourism, Studio Bua took a vernacular approach with a form based on local turf homes and a gradual renovation that focused on restoring and reinterpreting historical features while making full use of local labour, techniques and materials such as stone-turf retaining walls and tiles handmade from local clay.
Since the end of the 19th century, the combination of timber frame and corrugated metal cladding has been widespread throughout Iceland, replacing the traditional turf house. The prevailing wind comes down the valley from the north and east, and so it was decided to overclad the rear of the building and the new extension in corrugated aluzinc - one of the few materials proven to withstand the extreme weather.
In the 1930's concrete was the wonder material, even used as window frames in the case of Nýp farmhouse! The aggregate for the house is rather course with pebbles sourced from the beach below, giving it a special character. Where possible the original concrete walls have been retained and exposed, both internally and externally. The 'front' facades towards the access road and fjord have been repaired and given a thin silicate render (in the original colours) which allows the texture of the concrete to show through.
The project was developed and built in phases and on a modest budget. The site team was made up of local builders and craftsmen including the neighbouring farmer – who happened to own a cement truck. A specialist local mason restored the fragile concrete walls, none of which were reinforced.
Idées déco de grandes façades de maisons métalliques
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