2,321 Asian Home Office Design Ideas

Find the right local pro for your project
Find top design and renovation professionals on Houzz
和モダンの美しい家
和モダンの美しい家
株式会社テラジマアーキテクツ株式会社テラジマアーキテクツ
アトリエは、和を感じる素材を随所に取り入れ、落ち着いた時が流れる風雅な空間。
Japanese-style Home Office
Japanese-style Home Office
Ki ArtsKi Arts
The home-office includes a built-in flat wall monitor to use for long distance conferences and a computer area seen at the right edge of the photo. Both the center table and the computer desk can be hydraulically lowered into the rectangular recess (horikotatsu) in the floor beneath them. When the table and desk are raised, these recesses provide leg room when sitting on the floor.
Upper East Side
Upper East Side
Kassel InteriorsKassel Interiors
Headed by Anita Kassel, Kassel Interiors is a full service interior design firm active in the greater New York metro area; but the real story is that we put the design cliches aside and get down to what really matters: your goals and aspirations for your space.
Bright Home Office from Former Dark Room
Bright Home Office from Former Dark Room
Living DesignLiving Design
We brought the light in to this former dark room now residential home office. Our client wanted a peaceful space that was directly connected to nature, space for his spouse to work on occasion, and a place to play his drums. We delivered a design that eeked out additional space from a hall and large storage/laundry room. Our earth friendly paints and cork flooring, along with reuse of cabinet doors gives our nature-loving client peace of mind and allows him to breathe easy. We concealed cables, equipment, a fold-up desk, and privacy shades to give him a multi-purpose Zen office that blends with the Japanese style of their home. Dennis Timmons Photography
Asian Inspiration
Asian Inspiration
Feinmann, Inc.Feinmann, Inc.
Our client, a professor of Japanese sociology at Harvard, owned a Deck House home with its post and beam construction and 1950’s modernist simplicity. She asked Feinmann to design a multi-purpose addition to meet several needs: a functional yet spacious home office, a beautiful entry way into the home, and a serene sitting area. The client mentioned she has always wanted a Japanese “scholar’s study,” which is traditionally a contemplative workspace area enclosed by shoji screens. We told her the Japanese minimalism she desired and the clean modernist aesthetic of her existing home could marry quite nicely (the blending of East and West) with some thoughtful interventions. The challenge then became finding a way to balance these styles. The house is surrounded by many trees, so bringing nature into the home was easily achieved through careful placement of windows throughout the addition. But the design element that brought it all together was the large translucent wall (kalwall) in the main hallway. This unique material allows for diffused natural light to envelop the living spaces. It has the same insulative properties as a typical exterior wall, and therefore is considered to be a great “green” building material. It is also quite versatile, and we were able to customize it to give our accent wall the Japanese feel of a shoji screen. We reiterated this design element with actual shoji screens to enclose the scholar’s study, which also doubles as a guest room. Post-and-beam construction was continued from the existing house through the new addition in order to preserve aesthetic continuity. Homeowner quote: "I wanted a certain feeling and the Feinmann architect really got it. I had already been through three different architects—one even said that the house was a tear down." Awards: • 2007 Gold Prism Award Renovation/Addition Best Remodeling/Restoration under $250K • 2007 Best of the Best Design Award Residential Addition for Best Project under $250K • 2007 Remodeling Design Merit Award Residential Addition $100 - $250K • 2007 Regional NARI Award Contractor of the Year: Residential Addition • 2006 Eastern Mass NARI Award Best Addition over $100K Photos by John Horner
南城市の家
南城市の家
STUDIO COCHI ARCHITECTSSTUDIO COCHI ARCHITECTS
海沿いの住宅、©︎ Jingu Ooki
Portland Street of Dreams – 2015
Portland Street of Dreams – 2015
Hartmann&ForbesHartmann&Forbes
Designer: Maison Inc (Joelle) Photographer: David Papazian Roman Shades: LE1242 Tissage - Arabian

2,321 Asian Home Office Design Ideas

5