Midcentury Attached Garage Ideas and Designs
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Savant Homes, Inc.
The concept of this project was to bring life to this house and bring it back to its mid-century roots with a modern twist. Opening interior walls and connecting adjacent spaces was framework was open for the Interior Design.
The Kitchen mixes warm wood tones and cool blue cabinets to enhance the richness of the space. Exposed Structural Glulam Beams were installed throughout to open the adjacent spaces and allow for the connections to flow between new/old.
SALA Architects
The clients for this project approached SALA ‘to create a house that we will be excited to come home to’. Having lived in their house for over 20 years, they chose to stay connected to their neighborhood, and accomplish their goals by extensively remodeling their existing split-entry home.
Garage Doors Unlimited
This is a modern wood garage door that was done by GDU.
The panels are seamlessly flushed and was created to operate exactly like a traditional metal garage door by sections. This is a sectional garage door made from wood.
User
With the simple addition of vertically stacked windows to the garage door design, a basic steel door is transformed! Not only do the windows add plenty of style, they brighten up the garage interior too. With a modern flair, the new garage doors are also energy efficient and budget-friendly. | Project and Photo Credits: ProLift Garage Doors of Grand Rapids
All Buttoned Up - Smart Organization Solutions
After decluttering and organizing this is the new garage / man cave.
MoreSun Timber Frames
This cypress timber framed carport, tucked in next to the existing garage, creates additional covered space and highlights the beautiful landscape.
Cowart Door Systems
This set of doors offer a semi-custom look without designing from scratch or disregarding the existing style of the home. The flush steel door along with the glass/steel door provide a nice contrast to the overall masonry clad home.
Katie Hutchison Studio
Constructed in two phases, this renovation, with a few small additions, touched nearly every room in this late ‘50’s ranch house. The owners raised their family within the original walls and love the house’s location, which is not far from town and also borders conservation land. But they didn’t love how chopped up the house was and the lack of exposure to natural daylight and views of the lush rear woods. Plus, they were ready to de-clutter for a more stream-lined look. As a result, KHS collaborated with them to create a quiet, clean design to support the lifestyle they aspire to in retirement.
To transform the original ranch house, KHS proposed several significant changes that would make way for a number of related improvements. Proposed changes included the removal of the attached enclosed breezeway (which had included a stair to the basement living space) and the two-car garage it partially wrapped, which had blocked vital eastern daylight from accessing the interior. Together the breezeway and garage had also contributed to a long, flush front façade. In its stead, KHS proposed a new two-car carport, attached storage shed, and exterior basement stair in a new location. The carport is bumped closer to the street to relieve the flush front facade and to allow access behind it to eastern daylight in a relocated rear kitchen. KHS also proposed a new, single, more prominent front entry, closer to the driveway to replace the former secondary entrance into the dark breezeway and a more formal main entrance that had been located much farther down the facade and curiously bordered the bedroom wing.
Inside, low ceilings and soffits in the primary family common areas were removed to create a cathedral ceiling (with rod ties) over a reconfigured semi-open living, dining, and kitchen space. A new gas fireplace serving the relocated dining area -- defined by a new built-in banquette in a new bay window -- was designed to back up on the existing wood-burning fireplace that continues to serve the living area. A shared full bath, serving two guest bedrooms on the main level, was reconfigured, and additional square footage was captured for a reconfigured master bathroom off the existing master bedroom. A new whole-house color palette, including new finishes and new cabinetry, complete the transformation. Today, the owners enjoy a fresh and airy re-imagining of their familiar ranch house.
Photos by Katie Hutchison
User
As a way to update a mid century modern ranch home, a full view glass garage door with white frame is part of the home improvement plan. But did you know that glass panels for garage doors are also available in tinted, colored, etched, frosted and other options as well? In addition, the frames for glass doors come in various colors too. Some manufacturers even offer a seamless design. So, like other garage doors, a glass garage door can be fully customized! | Project and Photo Credits: Pro-Lift Garage Doors Savannah
Project Construction LLC
Mid Century ranch home exterior with corrugated metal siding, horizontal clapboards, and white stucco. Black asphalt shingle roof.
Midcentury Attached Garage Ideas and Designs
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