Showing posts with label family room. Show all posts
Showing posts with label family room. Show all posts

Great Panaromic in West Seattle Residence

The comfortable living space has been completed designed by the Lawrence Architecture which is located in the West Seattle district of Seattle, Washington. This living space design has a view property of living space for about 3,800 square feet, and 925 square feet detached the garage. The main materials which are construct this building is include the concrete, steel and a glass. While providing the privacy for the main living space is a curtain wall-enclosed the pavilion, the sites and the house is organized by a concrete wall which is up to twenty-four feet high such as the garage, the entry and the service spaces which are on the street of the wall.









The element for the circulation which is including the stairs with the
cantilevered steel treads also organized by the wall. The pavilion is capped by the supported on steel frames and the triangular steel trusses and also the roof swoops over the concrete wall. Eight by sixteen foot sections of the curtain wall are pivoted for the ventilation. Which are normally in place but it is removed for the photographs; the star has the demountable guardrails. The daylight basement level is occupied by a family room, media room, children’s bedroom and the bathrooms. While in a loft space above the kitchen is placed the master bedroom. Above the garage which is accessible via stair or the future elevator there is a living space.























White Interiors


In East Hampton, New York, architect and designer Russell Groves gave a modern beach house “a fresh outlook.” Groves designed the sofa, armchairs and the travertine-topped low table in the double-height living room, which he opened up with new fenestration and neutral hues.


Interior designer Jennifer Post maximized drama in a minimalist Tribeca penthouse by using strong contrasts, rich materials and abundant natural light. The family room—“the evening hub and entertainment area,” says Post—leads out to a walled private terrace. As with the other public rooms, comments the wife, “I was very adamant that we not have draperies because of the openness and the clean lines.”



Fashion designer Ralph Lauren and his wife, Ricky, bought a Jamaican villa on Round Hill, near Montego Bay, some 20 years ago. “It’s a place where you really love where you are,” he says. Marble floors were installed in the living room.



A Tribeca penthouse’s dramatic spaces and stylish, streamlined look evolved out of a couple’s collaboration with design firm Sills Huniford and architect Robert Kahn. Bead-board cabinetry adds “warmth and texture” to the kitchen, which is “clean and sleek,” observes James Huniford. The bleached table, originally a glossy black, was formerly the wife’s writing desk. “We reused beautiful or loved things the couple already owned.”



Light and elemental purity distinguish an apartment designed by architects Michael Gabellini and Kimberly Sheppard that virtually floats above the panoramic New York City skyline. The kitchen appliances and millwork contribute to the clarity and harmony of the apartment as a whole, in which light, form and material coexist within a minimal envelope,” says Gabellini.