77 Transitional Home Design Photos
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Home Design & Decor Magazine
Designer: Stephanie Semmes http://www.houzz.com/pro/stephbsemmes/semmes-interiors
Photographer: Dustin Peck http://www.dustinpeckphoto.com/
http://urbanhomemagazine.com/feature/1590
Lucas Fladzinski Photography
Photographer Lucas Fladzinski. Client MH Builders. Napa, CA. ©Lucas Fladzinski WWW.FLADZINSKI.COM Copyright strictly enforced
Bonick Landscaping
Small spaces can be the best. This pool and spa separated with a sheet of acrylic gives this pool an uninterrupted look. The limestone wall acts as a backdrop for the garden urn creating a focal piece of art
Cochrane Design
This sleek walnut coloured outdoor seating area sits within a stone courtyard/ patio that steps onto the lawn. The grand outdoor fireplace in the distance becomes the vocal point and the topiary bushes are strategically placed for an elegant finish.
77 Transitional Home Design Photos
Angus Mackenzie Architect
This freestanding brick house had no real useable living spaces for a young family, with no connection to a vast north facing rear yard.
The solution was simple – to separate the ‘old from the new’ – by reinstating the original 1930’s roof line, demolishing the ‘60’s lean-to rear addition, and adding a contemporary open plan pavilion on the same level as the deck and rear yard.
Recycled face bricks, Western Red Cedar and Colorbond roofing make up the restrained palette that blend with the existing house and the large trees found in the rear yard. The pavilion is surrounded by clerestory fixed glazing allowing filtered sunlight through the trees, as well as further enhancing the feeling of bringing the garden ‘into’ the internal living space.
Rainwater is harvested into an above ground tank for reuse for toilet flushing, the washing machine and watering the garden.
The cedar batten screen and hardwood pergola off the rear addition, create a secondary outdoor living space providing privacy from the adjoining neighbours. Large eave overhangs block the high summer sun, while allowing the lower winter sun to penetrate deep into the addition.
Photography by Sarah Braden
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