Showing posts with label architecture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label architecture. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Popular Home Features in 2015


The NAHB’s Economics and Housing Policy surveyed over 3,000 builders, designers, architects, manufacturers, and housing marketing specialists to forecast the characteristics of the average single-family detached home in 2015.


Can you guess the results? Take this quiz and see how well you do (answers posted at the bottom).

1. Size: The average new single-family home will be:
a. Larger, between 2800 and 3000 square feet
b. Stay the same (2496 square feet)
c. Smaller between 2000 and 2,400 square feet


2. will be a top priority in a home built in 2015.
a. Landscaping
b. Technology
c. Appliances


3. New home will have more green features, low-E windows, engineered wood products, and:
a. Use water efficiently
b. Solar energy
c. Radiant heat

4. True or False: Two-car garages remain high on homeowners’ priority lists.

5. True or False: The formal living room will be either combined with another room or completely disappear.

6. True or False: First-floor master bedrooms with walk-in closets will be a priority.

How did you do? BoninArchitects has various architectural services to help you design, build, or remodel a home that fits your priorities – now, in 2011 or in the future. Call or stop by to set up a free consultation!

Answers: 1.c; 2.b; 3.a.; 4.True; 5.True; 6.True.


Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Design Your Home Before You Find Property?

Once you decide to build a home, it’s hard not to think about it. There are many design elements to consider, and your architect will guide you through the decision-making process. Some of these you can decide on before you find the perfect piece of property; however, there are some decisions that will be influenced by the characteristics of your land.


Design elements to think about before you find property:
  • Specialty rooms for hobbies or activities;
  • The number of bedrooms and bathrooms you will need;
  • Storage space requirements;
  • Design details such as a gas fireplace vs. wood;
  • The theme of your interior design (colors, light, textures)

Wait until you find your land to determine these design fundamentals:
  • The home’s size and number of stories: site or local restrictions may limit the size, height, or even the placement of the home on your property;
  • Type of foundation: the type of foundation system you choose may be dependent upon local or state codes, the lot size, slope, and soil type;
  • Walkout basement: a sloping lot can allow for a walk-out basement, providing more usable square footage for recreation areas or additional guest bedrooms.

If you’re excited to get started on planning your home design, we suggest you create a binder of clippings and samples you are collecting. Include design elements and details you do not like: sometimes these are more valuable to your architect than features that you do like.

Ready to get started? Call or stop by to schedule a free site visit!

Friday, August 19, 2011

Three Reasons to Use an Architect


Thinking of building or remodeling? Consider using an architect. Why?

Reason #1: Architects save money.

An architect's services are a wise investment because a well-conceived and designed project can be built more efficiently and economically. As ideas evolve, changes can be made on a computer screen or paper much less expensively than when construction is under way. Other ways architect-designed projects save money include:

Designs that take full advantage of solar heat and natural lighting to save on energy needs.

Flexible design solutions that accommodate future growth and usage needs.

Accurate construction costs based on detailed drawings and specifications that result in quality materials and workmanship at a fair market price.

Materials, finishes, and design solutions that reduce maintenance and replacement costs.

Homes that sell faster and increase in value at resale.



Reason #2: Architects solve problems.

The architect is the one professional who has the education, training, experience, and vision to guide the design and construction process. This broad knowledge helps architects focus individual home owners' needs to maximize their investment in livable square footage on time and within budget.
Architects stay abreast of advances in roofing, brickwork, floor tile, paint finishes, and other building materials to ensure a smooth and cost-effective building process.



Reason #3: Architects see the big picture.

Few people realize how complicated it is to build until they find themselves lost in a maze of design options, building codes, zoning laws, and contractors. Architects don't just design four walls and a roof; they create total environments, interiors and exteriors that satisfy specific needs and functions. If a project requires engineering or other construction services, an architect can coordinate the team of experts.

An architect sorts out complex building codes and zoning laws and can locate qualified contractors, visiting the construction site to ensure that the project is built according to plans and specifications.

Source: www.aia.org

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Modern House plans and features contemporary architecture home page

If you are looking for a modern home. There are several types of plans that you can consider features contemporary architecture are as unique to your own needs, but are very different from the characteristic traditional home. Contemporary home is popular because the mid 1900s and him by postmodern and design elements neoeclectic you often can identify contemporary home and design a modern shape by high windows that are unique, and other features of the architecture.

When you're checking feature of contemporary architecture design to include in the plan within your modern home. There are many different things to search. In addition, you can spot these homes. Contemporary style by looking for rocks or wooden material ornamentation is very minimal and not consistent for windows up to the design of these homes use a minimalist and landscaping are often used to create curb appeal of your home because it is designed so minimalistic search feature the best for your home includes keying in the elements of design, these different and look at the features you need for designing your home up to date.

Internal characteristics of a modern House that features contemporary architecture, including things like:

-Open floor plan.

-High ceilings and cathedral ceilings

-Beams exposed, gabled roofs

-Crown moulding

-Ceramic or wooden floor operations

-Material engineer

-Food kitchen design

-Marble, stainless steel and concrete counters

Of course Features a contemporary design that you choose for your modern home depends on your particular tastes, but these are the types of elements that you expect to see in a home, most of which are categorised under the design of modern houses and modern. The target here is functions and all other characteristics and features traditional and kitschy designs do not exist in all of these homes.

Clean lines and natural color as a feature a contemporary design that may be included in the plan within your modern home. To create a modern Modern House as many people's wishes because popular styles. Offer something that is different from traditional home and allow people to have more interesting House and architecturally distinct for their needs that you selected for the decor of your home should match the design features and details of architecture. If you want to achieve with a contemporary style. Modern dishes these are things that should be followed when you are looking for a design architecture.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

A Swirling Green Roof Tops Nanyang Art School in Singapore

If art school was in our future we might opt to study under, or on top of, the amazing green roof at the School of Art, Design and Media at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore. This 5 story facility sweeps a wooded corner of the campus with an organic, vegetated form that blends landscape and structure, nature and high-tech and symbolizes the creativity it houses.
The glass façade provides a high performance building envelope that reduces solar gain and heat load while allowing the benefits of natural views and daylight into creative spaces. The glass walls provide a visual exchange between indoors and out allowing students and teachers to experience the building, the surrounding landscape and the interior plaza as fluid spaces. Diffused natural daylight is abundant throughout studios and classrooms, filtered through the surrounding foliage.
The curving green roofs distinguish the building from among the other structures on campus but the line between landscape and building is blurred. The roofs serve as informal gathering spaces challenging linear ideas and stirring perception. The roofs create open space, insulate the building, cool the surrounding air and harvest rainwater for landscaping irrigation. Planted grasses mix with native greenery to colonize the building and bond it to the setting.
Finishes are intentionally raw to act as a backdrop for the art, media and design projects. Concrete walls and columns, cement-sand screeded floors, timber railings and a neutral palette define the interior spaces which vary in shape and size. This amazing design seems to offer a new experience at every elevation or perspective fulfilling the intent that a school for art should inspire creativity.


VIA   

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Minimalist House Design Architecture Seen From the Side Position

Now if you want to build a house for shelter or for a business do not get confused in the case of architects designing homes that are minimalist but elegant, ancient house on a model created with triangular-shaped design on its roof, but now many homes with minimalist box model, many housing with various forms of a luxury home design, home design is very simple but is seems to be hardly suited for the small family occupy. This house has three bedrooms, one bathroom, kitchen, dining room, living room.

Monday, April 25, 2011

Sweet and Hip Little Cottage for Rent on the Isle of Skye

This very compact little Black Shed house with a corrugated iron roof from Rural Design on the Isle of Skye in Scotland has a simple rural quality that borders on the naive.
Yet this is contrasted with a surprisingly hip and industrial aesthetic inside.
Tough, durable restaurant -quality kitchen fixtures surprise you. This is no country kitchen.
At just 75 square meters (about 800 square feet) the steel-roofed simple shed cottage was built for a compact price at £115,000 – under $200,000.
The simple exposed wood walls and practical lamps and wood stove are far from the fussy interiors you expect in the countryside.
Throughout, a polished-concrete floor and scatter rugs keep it easy to clean, ideal for a rental cottage. The longevity of polished concrete makes it a green choice. No carpets to be thrown into landfill every ten years.
Almost industrial looking fixtures are used throughout. Stainless steel is the most recyclable material in the world. We are still recycling steel first smelted by the Ancient Romans.
Only at bedtime is there a minimalist reference to a more traditional rural cottage bedroom in the wrought iron bed.
The cottage is set in the middle of nowhere on a lonely hillside, with an expansive view that includes Macleod’s Table in the distance.

You can barely glimpse Black Shed house here, below the white farmhouse. You can rent it, here.
What a surprise the very chic industrial interior would make in this vast and lonely rural setting.
Via Trendir

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