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This interesting private residence project is a nice transformation design projected by Garcia Tamjidi from its previous "warehouse loft" located in the city of San Francisco.
The loft maximizes natural light provided by an exterior light court. Designed as a living gallery space, the architecture capitalizes on the openness and optimizes generous display surfaces. The interior stair connecting the ground floor from the loft becomes an artistic focal point and transition from the more public to the more private areas.
Adam Richards Architects projected the restoration and conversion of a traditional stone Quinta located in the mountains of southern Portugal. To meet the client’s needs, the home restoration project involves the radical re-ordering of the building’s internal spaces. The house has been comprehensively rebuild and extended, with exterior stonework sensitively restored, and married to a dramatic contemporary design that opens it up to the light an the landscape.
Two narrow strips forming a cross in plan, containing functional elements such as stairs and kitchen equipment, overlap each other across three storeys within the stone box of the main house. These define different sized spaces that contain the principal activities, for living, dining, cooking and reading.
This Open Box House 2 is a renovation project of the modern hilltop house that was done by San Francisco based Feldman Architecture. This project is a follow-up to Open Box House that sits next door.
Word from the Feldman architects:
We opened up every aspect of this urban residence to take advantage of its hilltop site and access to the outdoors. Sunlight enhanced the dramatic transformation of this house from an uninspired 2-storey residence into a sophisticated, modern dwelling.
With eco-friendly principles guiding the design direction, elements that once appeared dark and unwelcoming were given a glamorous new beginning with the introduction of translucent glass kitchen tiles, white oak plank floors, and fold away ground level doors. A roof that peels away to reveal a lively deck provides the final hinge to a remarkable “open box” design. were involved in a total renovation of this modern hilltop house.
This Fordice Residence was designed by OPA Design for their client who wanted to add two bedrooms and a garage to their existing ranch. They wanted to preserve the existing kitchen and master bedroom suite which they had recently remoldeled. They asked that a curve of some sort be integrated into the design and that the addition not look tacked on, so the challenge was to transform and integrate the existing with the new.
The solution was a two story addition with a curved roof; a large two car garage below with a new master suite and guest bed and bath above. Much of the existing ranch remained intact. A portion of the existing roof was removed and covered with a taller curved roof, transforming the dimly lit and low ceilinged dining area into a bright double height space suitable for entertaining large groups of friends.
The new structure and the existing imitation stone siding were covered with Milestone, a plaster like product, and cement board panels. The existing hip roof was changed to a gable then covered with a metal roof.
A renovation project for a new living space by HHF Architects. This independent structure creates a new living space under the roof and changes the unwanted conventional look of the house built in 1957. The house is standing in between two icons of Modern Swiss Architecture, on one side a Villa by Artaria & Schmitt and on the other side a Villa by the architect Hermann Preiswerk.
The roof is covered with wide metal sheets of a copper-titaneum-zinc-alloy. The surface treatment of the material looks more like a textile surface, than a common tin roof. The new form of the roof with the flattened ridge and the solid chimney alludes to the weekend house on the Tessenberg, designed by Paul Artaria.
In order to keep the costs low by profiting of synergies, the project and the construction of the building were planned simultaneously. To save the costs of an expensive emergency roof the new roof was put up over the existing one. The old roof was torn down only after the new one was sealed.
The waisted floorplan strengthens the perspective and projects the surrounding nature of the garden through the fully glassed openings back into the two seperate rooms.
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