Showing posts with label MODERN DESIGN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MODERN DESIGN. Show all posts

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Alexander van Berge, Interior Design Photography

Alexander van Berge, Interior Design Photography


Alexander_van_Berge_interior_design_photography_1 Luxury Interior Design

Interior Design Photography

Alexander van Berge first developed his passion for photography as a teenager growing up in Amsterdam, when he’d spend much of his spare time shooting friends and capturing places and moods using his first camera, a Leica. Fast-forward around thirty years, and his shots of some of the world’s most intriguing homes have appeared in magazines and advertising campaigns across the globe. Says Alexander, ‘architecture on its own is always interesting, but architects do tend to insist on perfection when it comes to photography of their work. With interiors, on the other hand, you get the combination of the shape of the rooms and the tastes and personalities of those who live in them – and that’s what makes my job so enjoyable.’

Alexander_van_Berge_interior_design_photography_2 Luxury Interior Design

Interior Design Photography

Above all, Alexander enjoys working with homeowners, art editors and corporate clients to produce an end result that everyone’s happy with: ‘It’s all about achieving a creative balance – about producing photos that look great while at the same time conveying the client’s message,’ he says.

Luxury Interior Design

Interior Design Photography

Alexander_van_Berge_interior_design_photography_4 Luxury Interior Design

Interior Design Photography

Alexander_van_Berge_interior_design_photography_5 Luxury Stylish  Interior Design

Interior Design Photography

Alexander_van_Berge_interior_design_photography_6 Luxury Stylish  Interior Design

Interior Design Photography

Alexander_van_Berge_interior_design_photography_7 Luxury Stylish  Interior Design

Source : Alexander van Berge

Modern Contemporary Design and Architecture

Welcome to the World of Modern Design and Architecture

Luxury Interior Design Warm House by Ludwik Kaizerbrecht & Beata Lisiewska

Luxury Interior Design Warm House by Ludwik Kaizerbrecht & Beata Lisiewska


Filed Under (interior designer) by Yossawat
Warm  House Modern Design Contemporary Archicetcure and Color Solutions

Modern Interior Design

The Warm house- modern space with the warm attitude. The Warm house contains two ways of living – fast, everyday hurry and calm , relaxing. It allows typical duplex space to be duplex also in use. Interior seems simple , bright , modern because of sunlight coming on walls and other reflecting materials in the morning .
Warm_House_2 Interior Design Kithen

Modern Interior Design


Kitchen Interior Design
In the evening spotlights illuminate the wood floor giving warm beige glow on the walls. The surface light illuminates art noveau style graphic on the wall making it softer and the stairs lighten by amber Leds seems to be warm in touch. Additionally , the pattern is a protection of walls, making it easier to clean – which is useful while having small kids.
Art Deco Interior Design Kitchen

Modern Interior Design

Kitchen Interior Design Space

The shiny, mat game can also been seen on the art noveau style pattern. The accent is repeated in the furniture, wall and bathroom and it is visible when surface lightened. The art nouveau style became leitmotiv of warm house project after works done in Brussels – the world capitol of Art Nouveau Style. All that metamorphosis change house into the warm , calm place suited perfectly for relax. This change is strictly connected with needs of inhabitants schedule.
Warm_House_4 Bathroom Design

Modern Interior Design

Warm_House_5 Bathroom Design

Modern Interior Design


Bathroom Design


Warm_House_6 Bathroom Design  Contemporary Design Architecture Interior

Modern Interior Design

Warm_House_7

Modern Interior Design

Interior Design Stairs

Modern Interior Design

Warm_House_9 Interior Design TV Living Room

Modern Interior Design

Warm_House_10 Light Solution Idea Interior Design Stairs

Modern Interior Design


Interior Design Fireplace

Modern Interior Design


Warm_House_12 Interior Design Stairs Light Idea

Modern Interior Design

Warm_House_13

Modern Interior Design


Warm_House_14 Interior Design Stairs

Modern Interior Design


Warm_House_15 Warm House Colors Interior Design Light

Modern Interior Design


Realization of this design took fourteen months and there were lots of problems among this time. Eventually it came quite similar to the visualizations which is the biggest advantage of whole project – it means it suits the inhabitants perfectly.

Location: Bedzin / Poland
Design: Ludwik Kaizerbrecht / Beata Lisiewska

Assosiates: Bartlomiej Zaboj / Weronika Juszczyk

Total house area: 150 sqm
Project area: 85sqm
Design: 2008
Finished: 2009
Photography: Kaizerbrecht / Zaboj

Source : ludilajt.eu

Modern Architecture - Fairfield House by Webber + Studio, Inc

Modern Architecture - Fairfield House by Webber + Studio, Inc



Filed Under (Interior Architecture) by Yossawat
Modern Facade
Modern Interior Design ARchitecture

Modern Contemporary Design and Architecture


David Webber, AIA, of the Austin-based firm Webber + Studio, jokes that the house in Austin’s Hyde Park neighborhood that he designed for himself and Ransom Baldasare, his business and life partner, is really just like everyone else’s. “It has everything anyone asks for when they’re looking for a new house: five bedrooms, three-and-a-half baths, a kitchen open to living and dining areas, a place for guests—programmatically it’s pretty unremarkable.” What Webber says may be true, but the reason he can say it with a smile is because he knows that apart from the program, the house is anything but commonplace.
Hyde Park is one of Austin’s older, centrally located neighborhoods, and its proximity to the University of Texas makes it popular with UT staff. Since part of Webber’s intention with the house was to have a permanent suite for his 68-year-old father when he was in town, it seemed like the right area.
Modern House Modern Architecture and Design
Modern Interior Design ARchitecture
Webber bought a 1947 craftsman-style home with an average-sized lot (120 by 60 feet), and set about creating the house. “We never start a project knowing exactly what shape it’s going to take,” he says. “We knew a few things that we wanted, but mostly, as with everything I do, when you understand the history and geography, the things just design themselves.
For both Webber, who was born and raised in Austin, and Baldasare, who is from California, having a home that was linked to its context and climate was key. To create a 3,200-square-foot home that would not take over the entire lot, Webber designed the home as a series of interlocking volumes and voids that embrace the outdoors, indirectly defining outdoor spaces such as a small terrace, larger backyard, rear patio, and a dog-trot-inspired breezway.
 Modern Design and Architecture Contemporary Ideas for living
Modern Interior Design ARchitecture

Living Room Green Sofas
“I was inspired by those dog-trot houses in the south,” says Webber. “In Austin you need to capture breezes where you can.” Clad in a rainscreen made of cypress on the front of the house, the interior courtyard, under the windows on the east and west sides, and double-locked, standing-seam metal roofing on remainder of the west side, the house is nothing if not fortified against the elements.
 Architecture Living Room Design
Modern Interior Design ARchitecture

Modern Contemporary Design and Architecture



Modern Interior Design Living Room
Walking through and around the house brings a new experience in every space. Webber started with a box facing the street, with a cathedral-like entry 25 feet high. That area quickly drops down to under 8 feet into a sitting area, then back up slightly for the kitchen and dining area. The box then ends in glass, as Webber carved out the center to create a patio.
 Architecture
Modern Interior Design ARchitecture

Modern Contemporary Design and Architecture



Modern Living Room

Back inside, you climb the stairs to the second floor, take a moment to rest in a loft-like sitting area before seeing where Webber’s vision of pulling out one side of the box comes to life in a bridge with a translucent hallway with an eastern-facing polycarbonate wall connecting a study, two kids’ bedrooms (the couple plans to expand their family), and his dad’s guest suite, with bedroom upstairs and steps down to a kitchenette, dining, and sitting area. “It’s my favorite place in the house,” says Baldasare about Webber’s dad’s realm, “because both the upstairs and downstairs living spaces are directly connected to the outside.” Directly connected to the outside, yet still part of the main house.
 Architecture
Modern Interior Design ARchitecture

Contemporary Design Stairs

The surprises continue on the home’s west side, where you notice that the three main upstairs bedrooms actually project out in bays, blocking harsh western sun and bringing in northern and southern exposure from strategically placed windows. Also on that side, a 12-foot cantilevered projectile, clad in metal roofing, creates covered parking.
 Architecture
Modern Interior Design ARchitecture

Modern Bedroom

With local materials such as cypress cladding on the outside, pecan cladding and floors on the inside and Texas limestone in the bathrooms, another connection to the area is realized. And although the house doesn’t look a thing like any of the smaller craftsman homes surrounding it, it makes you wonder why those other homes weren’t designed like this one. “I’m totally against the idea that a house should be one big mass in the center of the lot,” says Webber. “Defining spaces, whether inside or outside, small or big, can make every room feel surprisingly different and unique.”
 Architecture
Modern Interior Design ARchitecture

Modern Contemporary Design and Architecture



BathRoom Marvel and Light

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Modern Interior Design ARchitecture
Fairfield_House_10 Modern Architecture
Modern Interior Design ARchitecture
Fairfield House Garden Modern Architecture
Modern Interior Design ARchitecture

Source : Architectural Record, Webber + Studio, Inc


Dream Home in Jackson Hole Modern Architecture Interior Design

For a Wyoming Couple, Designer Barbara Barry creates a refined farmhouse that is perfectly tailored to the surrounding Tetons.




By John Francisco Andreu


The Jackson Hole Valley, bounded by the Tetons, has long lured outdoorsy types. Among them is a Wyoming couple who bought eighteen acres and then asked Barbara Barry, a prominent Los Angeles designer, to create their home from the ground up. "They wanted something that would suit the setting and their casual, active lifestyle," says Barry. "Their intention was to build an unpretentious yet refined farmhouse that would stand the test of time."

Living Room Modern Interior Art Deco Amercian Design

Dream Home in Jackson Hole Modern Architecture Interior Design

Barry, whose firm had previously designed three homes for the couple, initiated a search for an architect, which led to Peter Block of Atlanta: "We knew instantly he was our man because his inspiration was deeply founded in the use of historical precedent. He had a clear vision for a pure and simple country home. He understood that no grand gestures had to be made."

Keeping in mind the couple's desire for a home in the vernacular of a traditional American farmhouse, Block created a two-level, Eastern cedar structure with generously proportioned windows. "The clean and orderly aesthetic takes its cues from Shaker structures," Block says, "but with thicker posts to acknowledge the rugged surroundings. I also drew upon the New England tradition of connected farm buildings. Usually, a house and barn are linked by a third structure years later, but here it happened instantly." The property also encompasses a guesthouse-poolhouse as well as a barn for a boat. Says Barry, "Walking through the house, you catch glimpses of the other buildings. Together, they make a little village, creating a sense of intimacy in a wide-open landscape. It's wonderful to run from building to building in the snow."

The home's first floor is devoted mostly to a living room that opens onto a sunroom, a dining room and a kitchen with a breakfast nook. The second level contains the master suite, media room, office, children's bedrooms and nanny's quarters. Block maximized the number of windows to frame outside views while generally retaining the scale of a farmhouse. He eschewed drywall in favor of wide painted boards, stained wood and hand-burnished plaster walls. The emphasis on natural materials led to the use of rift-cut, wide-plank oak floors.

Awash in natural light, the interiors blend tradition with modern classicism. Barry maintains that she does not "decorate." Instead, she "orchestrates sophisticated but practical rooms, keeping the focus on function." No cowboy decoration for this Wyoming home.

Barry borrowed her palette from the great outdoors. The muted hues of ivory, taupe, ochre, sage, gray, green and blue produce a calming continuity throughout. Over time, the country-casual fabrics — including cottons, chenilles and leathers — will age ever more appealingly. The mix of traditional and contemporary furniture includes custom pieces designed by Barry. With their tailored silhouettes, her stylish choices show restraint while making comfort a priority.

"This is a project where architecture and interior design melded seamlessly to serve the clients," says Barry. "The enclave of buildings shelters a bustling, energetic family, providing a warm and nurturing counterpoint to the majesty of the Tetons."


View of the Tetons


An American Farmhouse

Living Room

Interior Design Modern Fireplace
Dream Home in Jackson Hole Modern Architecture Interior Design
Modern Fireplace
Art Deco  China Cupboard in Dining Room
Dream Home in Jackson Hole Modern Architecture Interior Design
China Cupboard in Dining Room


Master Bedroom Art Deco interior Design American Design
Dream Home in Jackson Hole Modern Architecture Interior Design
Master Bedroom

Interior in dressing area American Design
Dream Home in Jackson Hole Modern Architecture Interior Design
Dressing Area

Kitchen Style American Design
Dream Home in Jackson Hole Modern Architecture Interior Design
Farmhouse Style Kitchen

Black and White Kitchen
Dream Home in Jackson Hole Modern Architecture Interior Design
Black and White Kitchen

Design Fireplace in the Kitchen
Dream Home in Jackson Hole Modern Architecture Interior Design
Fireplace in the Kitchen

Design Causal Dining Area
Dream Home in Jackson Hole Modern Architecture Interior Design
Causal Dining Area

American Design Sunroom
Dream Home in Jackson Hole Modern Architecture Interior Design
Sunroom



Dream Home in Jackson Hole Modern Architecture Interior Design
Shaker Inspired Architecture


Dream Home in Jackson Hole Modern Architecture Interior Design
Poolhouse


Dream Home in Jackson Hole Modern Architecture Interior Design

INTERIOR DESIGN BY BARBARA BARRY

ARCHITECTURE BY PETER BLOCK

LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE BY RICHARD VAN GYTENBEEK


Fancy Appartment in Dalla's Interior Design Ideas

Fancy Appartment in Dalla's Interior Design Ideas



Dining Room
Modern Interior Design - Fancy Appartment in Dalla's Interior Design Ideas

In the world of furniture and fabrics, George Cameron Nash is a name synonymous with top-drawer quality and timeless style. His sleek Texas showrooms at the Dallas Design Center and Decorative Center Houston are capacious, light-infused spaces that hum with efficiency as designers, representing an elite and far-flung clientele, examine fabrics by manufacturers such as Rogers & Goffigon and Bennison and jot down orders for furniture from the likes of Rose Tarlow-Melrose House, Holly Hunt and Nash's own Cameron Collection with its Meyerland line.

Living Room Modern Interior Design
Modern Interior Design - Fancy Appartment in Dalla's Interior Design Ideas
Living Room

The conductors of this well-orchestrated production are Nash himself and his twenty-two-year partner in both professional and personal life, Mark Williams. With a perfect blend of Nash's right-brain creativity and Williams' left-brain former banker acuity, the pair joined forces to direct one of the busiest design firms in the country.

Collection in Living Room , Modern Interior
Passion for Collecting

Naturally, Nash and Williams' apartment in Dallas represents the best of their sleekly polished, comfortably luxe style. The residence is an exquisitely crafted sanctuary where sunlight flows through floor-to-ceiling windows to bathe cool white walls in an open floor plan. Gleaming oak plank floors are dyed a deep sable.

Art in The Modern Interior
Focusing on Art

Says Nash, "Our home is an edited assemblage of things I love to work with the most: favorite pieces by Holly Hunt and Rose Tarlow-Melrose House, plus art, antiques and accessories we've collected through the years. The color scheme is primarily black and white with accents of gold, cobalt blue and red. This home has a cosmopolitan electricity that suits us."

Their home also suits the four canine companions who share the space: three West Highland terriers and one Norwich terrier. When it came time to decide whether to stay in their former house with its backyard or become apartment dwellers, Nash says with a laugh, "The needs of our dogs came first. Two years ago, we were told of this great apartment in a mid-1960s building. Being on this floor gives us easy access to a nearby creek and parks — perfect for the dogs."

Plus, the building's own pedigree — the prominent, late architect George L. Dahl designed it — combined with this unit's generous natural light and luxurious wrap-around terrace, make it a perfect fit for the human inhabitants as well.




Art in The Modern Interior
Focusing on Art

Sitting Area Modern Interion Style Warm Colors
Sitting Area


Dining Room
Dining Room

Master Bath Modern Interior Design

Master Bath

http://celebrity-luxury-lifestyle.blogspot.com/
Casual Comfort in the Bedroom

Lounging in the Master Bedroom
Lounging in the Master Bedroom

Terrace Style Interior Exterior Design
Blue and Red Terrace

Art Deco Console in Library Interior Design Warm Colors

"We have a country house in East Texas, where we escape each weekend," relates Nash, "so we were looking for a city apartment where we could load up the wagon on Friday afternoon, slam the door and go."

The home serves as a design laboratory where they occasionally try out pieces from their showrooms. "We've sold three sets of our own dining room furniture to designers needing to finish a job quickly, but this set is here to stay. Rose Tarlow designed the chair, named after her mother, Violet, and added a chinoiserie finish."

The sophistication, good architecture, pet friendliness, access to outdoor beauty and proximity to the Dallas showroom made the decision to move from house to apartment an easy one. "The sum of all the parts," says Nash, "adds up to a place we love to come home to every day."

INTERIOR DESIGN BY GEORGE CAMERON NASH

ARCHITECTURE BY GEORGE L. DAHL

PRODUCED BY MARY JANE RYBURN