Home Design and Decorating
A Noteworthy Interior of Megurohoncho House by Torafu Architects

A new modern residence has been designed by Tokyo-based studio Torafu Architects. The house is also can be used for a place of work. The built-up house is spotted in Meguro. As you know, Meguro is the remarkable place since it is one of the 23 special wards of Tokyo, Japan.
You should see that this house is used to be a 40 year-old reinforced concrete building that formerly was the house storage and office places from the underground room to the second floor and a hosing area on the third floor. The center of attention of the renovation is emphasized on the house’s exterior and living accommodation on floor two and three. The second stage of the reconstruction is rest to switch the basement and floor one into marketable places.
For the start, whole interior partitioning is done away with to free up space. Towering over the nearby houses, the third floor is fine lit and provides the living room. On the contrary, the second floor offers a moderately supplementary personal room.An opening is created at the middle of the third floor and a huge part of furniture with built-in stairs is positioned unswervingly beneath it to produce a column of flow inside the structure. The faintly off-center furnishing insecurely is dividing the ensemble. As a result, this beautifies spaces with special characters around it.

A Noteworthy Exterior of Megurohoncho House by Torafu Architects

A new modern residence has been designed by Tokyo-based studio Torafu Architects. The house is also can be used for a place of work. The built-up house is spotted in Meguro. As you know, Meguro is the remarkable place since it is one of the 23 special wards of Tokyo, Japan.
You should see that this house is used to be a 40 year-old reinforced concrete building that formerly was the house storage and office places from the underground room to the second floor and a hosing area on the third floor. The center of attention of the renovation is emphasized on the house’s exterior and living accommodation on floor two and three. The second stage of the reconstruction is rest to switch the basement and floor one into marketable places.
For the start, whole interior partitioning is done away with to free up space. Towering over the nearby houses, the third floor is fine lit and provides the living room. On the contrary, the second floor offers a moderately supplementary personal room.An opening is created at the middle of the third floor and a huge part of furniture with built-in stairs is positioned unswervingly beneath it to produce a column of flow inside the structure. The faintly off-center furnishing insecurely is dividing the ensemble. As a result, this beautifies spaces with special characters around it.

A Fantastic Concrete Beam Crib in Israel by Uri Cohen Architects

Are you dreaming to occupy in a modern residence in Israel? Well, you should try to read this. Tel Aviv-based studio Uri Cohen Architects has remodeled a contemporary dwelling. It is called the Beam House. Finished in 2010, this 1,930 square foot fashionable residence is situated in Arbel, a village in northern Israel.
This residence has been intended for a customer who wanted to construct his house next to his farm. The architecture of the house blends several of the useful descriptions of the farming buildings in that area with the attraction to the ‘beams’ structure of a ‘country home’.
The dwelling is divided into three comparable flooring, which are private, semi private and public. With this condition, the opportunity exists to have the one private space with the light open to the patio and the inspection.
The personal space is blocked by concrete walls. The chunky wall is positioning between the public and semi public spaces and it comprises the facilities, which are the air conditioner, luggage compartment spaces, toilets, and many others.
The beams of the roof are placed on that ‘central concrete wall’ and candeliver to the living room. This atmosphere will keep the northern glass façade free of columns.
The spot flanked by the private and public spaces of the house leads to be sort of a dappled ‘outside space’ which is becoming the opening axis for the residence. Absolutely fantastic!!

An Astonishing Interior from Timber in Open House in Virginia

Do you want to have a house with the stylish Australian design? Try to look at this. Australian studio Architects EAT has designed the Open House. This two-level residence is exactly spotted in Richmond, Virginia, USA.
This building is remodeled in the purpose of exploring the physical and tactile language of building materials. The house employs timber as the basis, in a way how fastidious materials’ reaction to touch, sight, sound, weight and patina as the time it investigates and interprets their communication with natural illumination and dimness. The vigilant assortment of raw and recycled material is according to harmonizing textures forming and improving the space in an creative and maintainable manner.
The idea is that it is supposed to make thorough stability between scale and liveliness to be symbiotic and enables the veracity of each material to linger apparent in the final effect. It can be obviously shown in the change of materials on the staircase. They start as used timber sleepers on the lower flight followed by reconstituted stone forming the part of the kitchen counter top as well as making up the first corridor. The stairs then continue to change into black raw steel which has been folded and competently balanced to join the ground to the existing first floor. So astonishing!

The Blend of Attractive Terrain, Greenery, Scenery of Jelenovac Residence in Croatia

Are you tempting to live in modern house in the amazing city of Zagreb? Well, you should have a look on this.
An exquisite residence has been remodeled by Zagreb-based studio Dva Arhitekta. It is well known as Jelenovac Residence. this dwelling is finished in 2011, and accurately located in Zagreb, Croatia.It has two levels on its this 4,300 square foot in width. Positioned on the intersection of two roads, this fashionable house is enclosed with family homes and the Zagreb city park Jelenovac on the front.
This condition not only offers the pretty topography, but also the naturally fresh vegetation and definitely stunning sceneries.The residence is situated in order to allow the shaping of a smaller garden presenting a tampon area between the traffic and big garden. The landscape slant generates house base providing secondary facilities which is including the exterior spaces and the access. Floor plan follows the geometry of the site and divides itself in two parts.
The center of the space is comprising curved stairway made from wood. Its sculptural form of twisting surfaces matching with the orthogonal system of the house in an extraordinarily squashy style. It cause it become the focal point of the interior.The soft facade which is served in white is a contrast with dark openings creates energetically and exotic atmosphere of the facade. The owner of the residence can also look the peaceful views through the glass fences.

Eye Catching Gallery House By Ogrydziak/prillinger Architects In San Francisco, California

Ogrydziak/Prillinger Architects was designed this tasteful gallery house project in San Francisco, Californi.

Photography by Tim Griffith

Wonderful Widlund House By Claesson Koivisto Rune In Sandvik, Öland, Sweden

Claesson Koivisto Rune was this elegant widlund house project in Sandvik, Öland, Sweden

This house is like a funnel of light, space and sea views. The location is the west coast of the Baltic island of Öland. The white concrete box is “corsetted” in the middle, creating slightly sheared wall and roof angles. This gives the house both its direction and character, while also marking the difference between the rear private two-storey bedroom part and the communal double ceiling-height front part.

Precast concrete is perhaps not the most common choice for a private house at this scale, but was ideal for achieving the ultimate precision in manufacturing tolerance and colour/finish.

The concrete is not painted or surface-pigmented but solid white, which gives it a wonderful glow. The joints between the concrete elements are carefully designed and positioned so that – instead of interfering with – they become part of the building’s geometry and expression. The sealant in between is gray to enhance the graphic effect rather than matching the concrete surface.

Photography by Åke E.son Lindman

Superb Redesdale Residence By Space International In Los Angeles, California

Space International was constructed this charming redesdale residence project in Los Angeles, California

Perched high on a ridgeline with sweeping views of the Silverlake reservoirs this custom residence operates as a barrier from the streetside activity while opening up the interior spaces to the panorama beyond. A tiered split level section allows each of the primary areas: the eating, living and sleeping spaces, to have autonomy from one another while giving each a specific connection to the adjacent outdoor spaces and views.

Photography by Joshua White & Steve King

Cool The Seidenberg House By Metcalfe Architecture Design & Design In Conshohocken, Pennsylvania

Metcalfe Architecture & Design was this gorgeous the seidenberg house project in Conshohocken, Pennsylvania

MA&D reconstructed this mid-century kit house, taking advantage of its location by creating a bedroom nestled in the treetops. A glass connector bridge links the bedroom to the rest of the house. This house reflects our focus on play and romanticism. Trees and bridges evoke peace, solitude and memories of the escapes of childhood.

Photography by Barry Halkin

Brilliant Casa Finisterra By Steven Harris Architects In Cabo San Lucas, Mexico

Steven Harris Architects was created this eye catching casa finisterra project in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. The house mixes relaxation and modern very well, not to mention how gracefully it sits into the hillside above the water. In a way the flat slab structure of the roof reminds me of the mid-centur.

Photography by Scott Frances