Brown House Exterior with a Butterfly Roof Ideas and Designs
Refine by:
Budget
Sort by:Popular Today
1 - 20 of 107 photos
Item 1 of 3
ROAM Architecture
Updating a modern classic
These clients adore their home’s location, nestled within a 2-1/2 acre site largely wooded and abutting a creek and nature preserve. They contacted us with the intent of repairing some exterior and interior issues that were causing deterioration, and needed some assistance with the design and selection of new exterior materials which were in need of replacement.
Our new proposed exterior includes new natural wood siding, a stone base, and corrugated metal. New entry doors and new cable rails completed this exterior renovation.
Additionally, we assisted these clients resurrect an existing pool cabana structure and detached 2-car garage which had fallen into disrepair. The garage / cabana building was renovated in the same aesthetic as the main house.
Parco Studio
Seen here in the foreground is our floating, semi-enclosed "tea room." Situated between 3 heritage Japanese maple trees, we employed a special foundation so as to preserve these beautiful specimens.
Jeff's Custom Painting
Three coats of paint were applied to this exterior door and several light coats of spray paint on the plastic window frame.
Hibbs Homes
Hibbs Luxury Homes is a preferred builder for SkyRidge Park City
This gorgeous mountain retreat is under construction in Park City, UT's newest master planned community - SkyRidge. Located adjacent to Deer Valley, Mayflower, and the Jordanelle Reservoir, this four-season community offers outdoor adventures and scenic relaxation.
See More at Lux Mountain Home in Park City, UT by Hibbs Luxury Homes
LDa Architecture & Interiors
TEAM
Architect: LDa Architecture & Interiors
Interior Design: LDa Architecture & Interiors
Builder: Denali Construction
Landscape Architect: Matthew Cunningham Landscape Design
Photographer: Greg Premru Photography
RDM Architecture
Large glass makes for spectacular views. An angled upper and lower patio gives multiple outdoor spaces. Custom steel braces and a wood ceiling and a large overhang protects the windows from the sun.
Photos: © 2020 Matt Kocourek, All
Rights Reserved
Rhodes Architecture + Light
Wingspan’s gull wing roofs are pitched in two directions and become an outflowing of interiors, lending more or less scale to public and private space within. Beyond the dramatic aesthetics, the roof forms serve to lend the right scale to each interior space below while lifting the eye to light and views of water and sky. This concept begins at the big east porch sheltered under a 15-foot cantilevered roof; neighborhood-friendly porch and entry are adjoined by shared home offices that can monitor the front of the home. The entry acts as a glass lantern at night, greeting the visitor; the interiors then gradually expand to the rear of the home, lending views of park, lake and distant city skyline to key interior spaces such as the bedrooms, living-dining-kitchen and family game/media room.
ROAM Architecture
Updating a modern classic
These clients adore their home’s location, nestled within a 2-1/2 acre site largely wooded and abutting a creek and nature preserve. They contacted us with the intent of repairing some exterior and interior issues that were causing deterioration, and needed some assistance with the design and selection of new exterior materials which were in need of replacement.
Our new proposed exterior includes new natural wood siding, a stone base, and corrugated metal. New entry doors and new cable rails completed this exterior renovation.
Additionally, we assisted these clients resurrect an existing pool cabana structure and detached 2-car garage which had fallen into disrepair. The garage / cabana building was renovated in the same aesthetic as the main house.
Francesco Pierazzi Architects
FPArchitects have restored and refurbished a four-storey grade II listed Georgian mid terrace in London's Limehouse, turning the gloomy and dilapidated house into a bright and minimalist family home.
Located within the Lowell Street Conservation Area and on one of London's busiest roads, the early 19th century building was the subject of insensitive extensive works in the mid 1990s when much of the original fabric and features were lost.
FPArchitects' ambition was to re-establish the decorative hierarchy of the interiors by stripping out unsympathetic features and insert paired down decorative elements that complement the original rusticated stucco, round-headed windows and the entrance with fluted columns.
Ancillary spaces are inserted within the original cellular layout with minimal disruption to the fabric of the building. A side extension at the back, also added in the mid 1990s, is transformed into a small pavilion-like Dining Room with minimal sliding doors and apertures for overhead natural light.
Subtle shades of colours and materials with fine textures are preferred and are juxtaposed to dark floors in veiled reference to the Regency and Georgian aesthetics.
Atlas Architects
Spotted gum timber has been applied to the soffit lining to create a warm aesthetic.
Thomas Studio
This birds eye view of the house demonstrates the stepped levels and how the design follows the contours of the slope. Each of the three blocks are connected by glazed link spaces. This design has a simple logic to arrange a large house on a sloping site, without the costs of excavating large quantities of material to cut into the slope.
Arielle C. Schechter, AIA
The house has a gentle butterfly roof with a built in scupper to collect rainwater in an area with difficult well access.
Brown House Exterior with a Butterfly Roof Ideas and Designs
1