Interiors
posts + steel for structural system, rest is curtainwall, non-structural
spiral ductwork
windows
use of interior windows
"full-length planks (from the ground to the roofline) of clear-cut vertical cedar. Devan used Eco Wood Treatment, a preservative that protects wood from aging but gives it an aged look. He then applied a mixture of two transparent stains (one brown and one black) that allows the grain of the cedar to shine through."
ceiling joists & texture
"The walls are parged--a troweled-on mix of sand, lime, portland cement, and water. It's typically a structural solution, rather than a finish material,"
closeup of same. E.g. of how corner could be made for window seat beside FP
Hopes Windows -- e.g. of option for LR that preserves lower operable awning
e.g. of wood BR wall with neutral carpet
corner window seat
e.g. of black lower wall ribbon causing tv to blend in
e.g. of reclaimed wood topping walls in otherwise mod-ish interior
note window seat and framed out window trim
"Those windows are quite simple- they are large pieces of double insulated glass that are set into the opening. They aren't from a window supplier , but a glass supplier."
ply facing on island
clerestory windows sorta like our high windows? (ours just 18x18 in plan, tho--these more like 30x30 prob)
window seat (no dimensions provided, tho)
Milestone floor finish over concrete in "mottled espresso"
e.g. of how ceiling joists (gloriosa variety) appear alongside wood-covered flush ceiling
e.g. of wood cladding filling wall between window tops and ceiling plate
gauzy curtains, suspended from ceiling tracks on chains
front door in 10.3? (Fir slab door + single frameless light?)
bench seat benchmarks: this one claimed to be 18" high (woodwork only, doesn't include cushion) and 29" deep (which doesn't make sense to me, given look of cabinetry beside it), with cushion 21" wide (really? Cushion is 8" narrower than bench??? No sense).
post & beam skeleton with curtainwall as base structure?
interesting joint of two wall materials
we prob can't/shouldn't do this (for cash money reasons, among others) but: glazed steel doors, reclaimed ceiling, stone floor.
forget glam grandeur--just check the end tables cantilevered out of pockets cut in integral headboard wall
same wall stuff as prior pic, diff view--fiber cement? Durock? Other backer board?
what's this on wall? And how finished?
sofa! (Fair blend of slouch/cushy + modern crisp?)
steel "staples" to fill gaps per code
" Because door hardware is subject to such heavy use, it’s a place where low quality translates disproportionately to dissatisfaction. You want a lock set that reliably latches and a handle set with some weight. Current favorites of mine are made by Omnia, Emtek and FSB."
"A low-mass radiant floor comes up to temperature quickly using a lower water temperature than its high-mass or staple-up counterparts. As you’d expect, the panels are more expensive than a traditional subfloor, but the labor savings on the heating side help offset this."
good info about step lighting in comments
spiral ductwork
Q