google ad sense 728 x 90

Showing posts with label luxury modern home. Show all posts
Showing posts with label luxury modern home. Show all posts

Modern Home On The Island of São Miguel by Portugal Architect Bernardo Rodrigues







This single family residence, House of the Flight of Birds (or Flight of Birds House), located on São Miguel Island (St Michael Island) in the Azores was designed by Portugal's Harvard and Columbia educated architect Bernardo Rodrigues and recently featured in Architizer and on Arch Daily.

In case you haven't yet seen the unusual modern home with it's incredible rooftop views, take a look.












The incredible views from the homes' inviting undulating rooftop:






The interior:






Architect: Bernardo Rodrigues
Location: Ribeira Grande
Preliminary Study: James Grainger, Pedro Mosca, Natacha Viveiros
Execution: Nelson Ferreira, Ye Xuanyong, Vasco Melo, Laura von Dellemann, Alexandra Balona
Work: Adriana Massague, Rita Breda, Ana Soares, Jessica Silva, Sofia Cordeiro, Raquel Fernandes Elena Archipovait Marcello Zahr
Project Year:2002-2010
photos by photographer Iwan Baan


Bernardo Rodrigues is one of Portugal's most innovative architects. Be sure to see more of his work at his website.

Attn. Location Scouts!
The owner of this amazing home is now allowing the home to be used for commercial print and television shoots. If you have a luxury product or service you think is appropriate, please contact me for more information.

Luxury Villas in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia By Orange Architects





Orange Architects is a joint collaboration between three architecture firms; JSA, Cimka and Hofman Dujardin. They were established with the design of these three modern luxury villas for a housing development in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

Villa Ajmakan, 800m²:









Located on the northwest side of the city of Riyadh, the villa is organized in three living floors. On the majestic ground floor with a ceiling height of almost 4m the formal living, formal dining and the Majilis are located.

All of these precious formal rooms have views to the green and the fountains in the garden. Perforated concrete give a sublime light effect to the Majilis. The large formal entrance with la central staircase is lighted through the direct sunlight which enters the core of the house through the water fountain with a glass floor located on the top floor.

All of the formal rooms are accessed from the formal entrance. With the use of warm textures, fabrics, tiles and lightning each formal room has a beautiful and warm atmosphere. The formal entrance with white walls and a travertine floor is modern and elegant.








Villa Ajmakan II, 460m²:


The magic and spatial beauty of a natural cavern, a Cenote, with its carved out spaces and halls, was the inspiration of the Orange design team for this assignment. The Cenote appears as an indoor oasis, naturally lit by stripes of daylight that reflect in its enclosed pond. A perfect example of sublime architectural quality, defined by space, material and light.

For the Ajmakan prototype villa the concept of the Cenote was translated in a compact spatial stacking of the different rooms, with an exiting internal space in between for disconnecting the different functions. By doing so we are able to position the different parts of the program exactly the way the client wants, and at the same time create architectural excitement. Thereby the concept is flexible and comfortable.

Room positions can be altered to individual wishes, but the spatial concept stays the same. Central theme in this concept is the quality of the in-between space. This in- between space, the void, offers strategic views in different directions, both vertical and horizontal, while preventing the villa for an over exposure to the sun. Daylight is directed carefully and deep in to the house and at the same time the void functions as an effective tool for natural ventilation.






Orange Architects, established in 2008, is an intense collaboration with the architectural offices HofmanDujardin from Amsterdam and Cimka from Rotterdam.

Since mid 2010 the cooperation intensified. The three agencies complement each other very well, both in substance and in terms of the additional expertise that the different agencies offer.

Orange has been working since successfully on projects in the Netherlands, Belgium, Ukraine, Lebanon and Saudi Arabia.


Ray Kappe Beach Front Home On the Market For $13.5 Million



FOR SALE: 1600 The Strand, Manhattan Beach, CA 90266

Built in 1985 by well-known architect Ray Kappe of Kappe +Du architects, the 5200 square foot, 3 bedroom 6 bathroom beach front home, known as the Scheimer Residence, on California's Manhattan Beach Strand has recently gone on the market for the first time since the house was constructed.

Sustainable & Spectacular Home In The Hills. The Sunset Plaza Residence.




The Sunset Plaza Residence by David Thompson and Kevin Southerland of Los Angeles-based architecture, development and sustainability design firm Assembledge+, is high up on my list of dream homes.




With lots of light, an open floor plan, large mitered windows, indoor/outdoor living area, covered attached garage, an infinity pool and 180˚ views of Los Angeles, it pretty much fills my check list for the perfect abode. The house was also one of the homes on last year's CA Boom Show LA architecture tour.




Located above the Sunset Strip in the Hollywood Hills of Los Angeles, the design for this 5,000 sq ft house opens up to the surrounding landscape allowing the project to utilize all of the relatively flat site, unique to the hills. The simple forms and warm material palette evoke a clean modernist approach reminiscent of the early modernist homes in the area by Schindler, Neutra, and Carl Maston among others.




The exterior is clad in a combination of cinnamon-colored mangaris wood (a sustainably harvested Brazilian hardwood), smooth-troweled stucco and cement board painted brown.





To deliver as much natural light as possible, architects deployed skylights, interior glass panels and exterior glass walls, some translucent but not transparent, to preserve privacy. “The way the plan is laid out, as an L-shape rather than a block, gives the house even light throughout the interior rooms,” Southerland says.



Assembledge oriented the house on the flat promontory, ensuring sightlines from every room. “We wanted to extend what we see as the great Southern California modernist project where there is a real integration of indoors and outdoors,” Southerland says. Here we see the downstairs living room, which flows into a family room shown in the next photo.



Ceiling-to-floor movable glass walls open the expansive space to the outdoor terrace and its infinity saltwater pool. Cool-white terrazzo interior floors continue outside, unifying the spaces. “The idea was to make this continuous, uninterrupted plane that turns into water,” Thompson says. A subtle upward inflection of the roof plane farther extends south and west views.


above: A wide supporting column is wrapped in copper-hued mirrors at one corner of the family room. It captures flashes of artwork, furniture, foliage and water. “It brings in the reflections from the hills, the architecture, and even people walking by,” Southerland says. “That column is actually inside the room, so that when you close the glass doors, it reads as a transparent corner.”

More views of the copper clad supporting column:


A 1940s French Empire-style home with a mansard roof used to sit on the 13,000-square-foot site, according to architect Thompson.




His client’s desire for something more modern extended to the kitchen, lined with custom walnut cabinetry.




“I can turn any home style into quite a pad, but I really like modern,” owner Brad Blumenthal says. “Although it’s by far the most difficult type of house to design because the lines are so clean, you can’t hide anything.”


above: Back by the entry, stairs lead to the second floor. Contemporary homes are often criticized for lack of storage, but Assembledge took advantage of otherwise empty pockets of space.


above: A modern interpretation of a Japanese tansu cabinet is tucked underneath the staircase. “Rather than it being a wood cabinet, we wanted it to look as if it was part of the wall — clean and simple,” Thompson says. Note the powder room in the distance (also shown below).


above: the powder room off the main entry, with a glass wall alongside the driveway.



above: the master bath has a large glass enclosed double shower, limestone flooring and walls and a bathtub set within wenge wood.



above: The series of outdoor spaces were designed by Jonathan Goldstein of Jonny Appleseed Landscaping in Beverly Hills.

Built by Eric Engheben of 44 West Construction in Topanga, the architecture unfolds in a similar manner upstairs. An exterior wall of the master bedroom terrace has been cut away, creating a “window” toward the scenery.



It was important to the designers and their client to balance the use of glass and terrazzo with other materials that were visually warmer, thus the American walnut floor on the second floor.



And as seen at night:




floor plans:

Assembledge+
6363 wilshire blvd., #401
los angeles, ca 90048
phone 323.951.0045
fax 323.951.0046

Special thanks to photographer Michael Weschler, Debra Prinzing and the Los Angeles Times, David Thompson of Assembledge+ , 44 West Construction and pushpullbar for information, quotes and additional images.

Please donate

C'mon people, it's only a dollar.