House Design News |
- Luxury Apartment in Amsterdam by Hofman Dujardin Architects
- How to Make Your Home Feel More ‘Natural’
- P_House, Transformation of Small Post War House Into Modern Live/Work Home by Ras-a Building Design Studio
Luxury Apartment in Amsterdam by Hofman Dujardin Architects Posted: 13 Mar 2014 12:34 PM PDT This project of Hofman Dujardin Architects, apartment renovation, 120m² Interior apartment in Amsterdam. With new space planning, materialisation, furniture and lightning. The kitchen integrated in the living room. Description from Hofman Dujardin Architects:
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How to Make Your Home Feel More ‘Natural’ Posted: 13 Mar 2014 01:40 AM PDT There’s something incredibly pleasant about spending time outdoors – especially in a scenic area when the weather is nice. Being inside all day can make us feel claustrophobic, stir crazy and irritable, whereas getting outside into the fresh air lets us enjoy wide open space, cool air and beautiful sunshine which all conspires to help us feel more relaxed and at ease.
The truth is that we are evolutionarily programmed to seek out areas that are green. These are the spaces that would have once provided us with shelter, with resources and with safety, and our brain is programmed to recognise them as such. As soon as you get outside into a lush park or a nice beach, your brain produces endorphins and other ‘feel good’ hormones to let you know you’re home. Here are some tips you can use that will help you do just that… Well the good news is that research has also found that simply looking at the colour green can have a similar effect. Want to make your home more ‘naturally’ calming? Then try using green in the décor. And if not green, you can choose from a number of other calming colours. One calming hue that is particularly popular in interior design is light blue which can look like a clear sky when implemented correctly. Plants Natural Materials Light The Other Senses Focus on all these elements and your rooms will be just as calming as nature – but without the bees. It’s not fengshui… it’s much more effective! Leslie Kramer, the author of this post, is a freelance blogger, who is currently writing for Alliance Floor Source, specializes in providing all types of flooring for your home and office. Leslie is an interior designer and uses blogging as a platform to share interior designing tips. |
Posted: 13 Mar 2014 12:34 AM PDT Description of P_House from Architects: The challenge was making the small house feel larger without growing the house horizontally. The majority of interior walls where removed or relocated; allowing the living, kitchen, and dining area to be one fluid space. A fourteen foot wide sliding glass door pockets out of site, extending the space outside to a revamped back yard and swimming pool. This outdoor living area becomes the focal point of the new design, while making the modest size of the interior feel more expansive. A bedroom, a bathroom, and the one car garage are the only rooms that keep their original location. A design studio with it's own entrance replaces a third bedroom and the old kitchen. The master suite is relocated to a new second story addition which cantilevers over the one car garage below creating additional covered parking. It's slim form allows the midday sun to shine over the main floor and onto the pool and outdoor living area. The use of clerestory windows on the south elevation prevent views of the busy street, while still bringing in breezes and framing the tops of nearby palm trees. The north elevation, which faces the back yard and pool, has floor to ceiling windows providing the interior with an abundance of diffused natural light. The open tread stairwell acts like a thermal chimney sucking warm air through out the house and ventilating it outside through operable windows at the upper level. High solar reflective roofing, light colored cement board siding, and a well insulated building envelope add to the passive solar design. This along with the use of high efficiency ceiling fans, eliminates the need for A/C. A clean burning modern stove reduces heating loads during the colder months. Other sustainable building materials and methods used include a tankless water heater, FSC certified cedar, low V.O.C. paints, bamboo flooring, and xeriscape yards. [ Ras-a ] |
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