Galley Kitchen with Limestone Worktops Ideas and Designs
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Nandina Home & Design
A mid-sized transitional open-concept house that impresses with its warm, neutral color palette combined with splashes of purple, green, and blue hues.
An eat-in kitchen is given visual boundaries and elegant materials serves as a welcome replacement for a classic dining room with a round, wooden table paired with sage green wooden and upholstered dining chairs, and large, glass centerpieces, and a chandelier.
The kitchen is clean and elegant with shaker cabinets, pendant lighting, a large island, and light-colored granite countertops to match the light-colored flooring.
Home designed by Aiken interior design firm, Nandina Home & Design. They serve Augusta, Georgia, as well as Columbia and Lexington, South Carolina.
For more about Nandina Home & Design, click here: https://nandinahome.com/
To learn more about this project, click here: http://nandinahome.com/portfolio/woodside-model-home/
ROSE ARCHITECTURE AND CONSTRUCTION
A gas range is the lead guitarist in this stunning transformation.
NYKB
Small modern kitchen using black and white contrast with white counter tops and backsplashes to maximise feeling of space and practical dark cabinets creates an attractive clean look. Modern design with stainless steel appliances and handles finish it off.
Allen Construction
Whole house remodel of a classic Mid-Century style beach bungalow into a modern beach villa.
Architect: Neumann Mendro Andrulaitis
General Contractor: Allen Construction
Photographer: Ciro Coelho
Edmunds Studios Photography, Inc.
Spacious kitchen with custom island and cabinets. Original art, artist designed light fixture and rug.
User
A bronze farm sink and bronze hardware are accented by fossil limestone countertops. Dishwasher drawers give this kitchen a gourmet touch, particularly with the cabinets’ brushed nickel furniture feet while dark walnut stained hardwoods are paired with a vintage Persian rug.
Betty Wasserman Art & Interiors
The kitchen and breakfast area are kept simple and modern, featuring glossy flat panel cabinets, modern appliances and finishes, as well as warm woods. The dining area was also given a modern feel, but we incorporated strong bursts of red-orange accents. The organic wooden table, modern dining chairs, and artisan lighting all come together to create an interesting and picturesque interior.
Project Location: The Hamptons. Project designed by interior design firm, Betty Wasserman Art & Interiors. From their Chelsea base, they serve clients in Manhattan and throughout New York City, as well as across the tri-state area and in The Hamptons.
For more about Betty Wasserman, click here: https://www.bettywasserman.com/
Bask Interiors
Kitchen
Photo Credit: Martina Gemmola
Styling: Bea + Co and Bask Interiors
Builder: Hart Builders
Verner Architects
Completely new kitchen. Views through to Dining Room and Pacific Ocean.
Photo Credit: Matthew Millman
FINNE Architects
A new modern farmhouse has been created in Ipswich, Massachusetts, approximately 30 miles north of Boston. The new house overlooks a rolling landscape of wetlands and marshes, close to Crane Beach in Ipswich. The heart of the house is a freestanding living pavilion, with a soaring roof and an elevated stone terrace. The terrace provides views in all directions to the gentle, coastal landscape.
A cluster of smaller building pieces form the house, similar to farm compounds. The entry is marked by a 3-story tower, consisting of a pair of study spaces on the first two levels, and then a completely glazed viewing space on the top level. The entry itself is a glass space that separates the living pavilion from the bedroom wing. The living pavilion has a beautifully crafted wood roof structure, with exposed Douglas Fir beams and continuous high clerestory windows, which provide abundant natural light and ventilation. The living pavilion has primarily glass walls., with a continuous, elevated stone terrace outside. The roof forms a broad, 6-ft. overhang to provide outdoor space sheltered from sun and rain.
In addition to the viewing tower and the living pavilion, there are two more building pieces. First, the bedroom wing is a simple, 2-story linear volume, with the master bedroom at the view end. Below the master bedroom is a classic New England screened porch, with views in all directions. Second, the existing barn was retained and renovated to become an integral part of the new modern farmhouse compound.
Exterior and interior finishes are straightforward and simple. Exterior siding is either white cedar shingles or white cedar tongue-and-groove siding. Other exterior materials include metal roofing and stone terraces. Interior finishes consist of custom cherry cabinets, Vermont slate counters, quartersawn oak floors, and exposed Douglas fir framing in the living pavilion. The main stair has laser-cut steel railings, with a pattern evocative of the surrounding meadow grasses.
The house was designed to be highly energy-efficient and sustainable. Upon completion, the house was awarded the highest rating (5-Star +) by the Energy Star program. A combination of “active” and “passive” energy conservation strategies have been employed.
On the active side, a series of deep, drilled wells provide a groundsource geothermal heat exchange, reducing energy consumption for heating and cooling. Recently, a 13-kW solar power system with 40 photovoltaic panels has been installed. The solar system will meet over 30% of the electrical demand at the house. Since the back-up mechanical system is electric, the house uses no fossil fuels whatsoever. The garage is pre-wired for an electric car charging station.
In terms of passive strategies, the extensive amount of windows provides abundant natural light and reduces electric demand. Deep roof overhangs and built-in shades are used to reduce heat gain in summer months. During the winter, the lower sun angle is able to penetrate into living spaces and passively warm the concrete subfloor. Radiant floors provide constant heat with thermal mass in the floors. Exterior walls and roofs are insulated 30-40% greater than code requirements. Low VOC paints and stains have been used throughout the house. The high level of craft evident in the house reflects another key principle of sustainable design: build it well and make it last for many years!
Roundhouse
Roundhouse Urbo and Classic matt lacquer hand painted, luxury bespoke kitchen. Urbo in Farrow & Ball Hardwick White and Classic in Farrow & Ball Downpipe. Worktop in Honed Basaltina Limestone with pencil edge and splashback in stainless steel. Photography by Darren Chung.
Galley Kitchen with Limestone Worktops Ideas and Designs
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