batangas 080811 01 Contemporary Architects Residence in The Philippines: Batangas House
Batangas House was designed by architect Chut Cuerva in collaboration with Tisha de Borja (for the architect’s family) and is located in the Philippines. The exterior of the residence is modern and minimalist, disclosing the contemporary style that also characterizes the indoor arrangements. The core of the house is a generous open plan living room with views towards the large, spectacular pool and the lush vegetation surrounding the building. The color palette is simple, based on hues of white and beige, creating a peaceful living environment. Large pendant lamps and floor-to-ceiling windows give the impression of space while sculptural decorative items contribute to the artistic feel of this crib. We invite you to have a look at the photos below and tell us if there are any details that captured your attention. What do you think of the overall interior design of this residence? [Photography by Tom Epperson]
batangas 080811 02 940x1233 Contemporary Architects Residence in The Philippines: Batangas House
batangas 080811 03 Contemporary Architects Residence in The Philippines: Batangas House
batangas 080811 04 940x1203 Contemporary Architects Residence in The Philippines: Batangas House
batangas 080811 05 Contemporary Architects Residence in The Philippines: Batangas House
batangas 080811 06 940x1273 Contemporary Architects Residence in The Philippines: Batangas House
batangas 080811 07 940x1235 Contemporary Architects Residence in The Philippines: Batangas House
batangas 080811 08 Contemporary Architects Residence in The Philippines: Batangas House
batangas 080811 09 Contemporary Architects Residence in The Philippines: Batangas House


Source: http://freshome.com/2011/08/11/contemporary-architects-residence-in-the-philippines-batangas-house/


Pacific Coast 01 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
This imposing modern residence spells out comfort and luxury. Integrated in a fascinating landscape, steps away from Malibu beach, this home has a total living area of 6,152 square feet, 4 bedrooms and 4.5 bathrooms. The exterior of the residence is particularly interesting with its stone finish, modern terraces and balconies. Most of the rooms face a generous pool with opulent patio furniture. Guests can enjoy views of the ocean while resting by the pool or taking a swim. Once inside, one is overwhelmed by the imposing interiors featuring plenty of space, light and luxurious arrangements. Floor to ceiling windows, leather sofas, an indoor bar for up to eight persons, palm trees- all these elements can definitely make an impression. The living room opens up to the pool, pizza oven, BBQ, refrigerator, a large deck and a grassy yard through large sliding doors. In case you were wondering how much is this crib worth, we found out it is currently listed here, for $26,000,000!
Pacific Coast 02 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 03 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 04 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 05 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 06 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 07 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 08 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 09 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 10 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 11 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 12 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 13 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 14 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 15 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 16 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 17 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 18 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 19 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 20 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 22 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 23 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 24 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 27 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 28 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 29 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 30 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 21 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 31 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 32 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 33 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 26 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 34 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu
Pacific Coast 35 1 Kind Design Opulent Custom Built Residence by The Ocean in Malibu


Source: http://freshome.com/2011/08/11/opulent-custom-built-residence-by-the-ocean-in-malibu/
Beam Duo Interview: Southern Resourcefulness and Ingenuity of Holler Design
Melissa and Matt Alexander of Holler Design were kind enough to answer a few questions regarding their work, lifestyle and passion for furniture design. You can enjoy some of the beautiful pieces of furniture designed by Holler Design in this post and further information and furniture pictures can be found on their website, HollerDesign.
  • Freshome:  How did you get started with HollerDesign?
  • Holler Design: I think Matt and I knew that we wanted to work together pretty soon after receiving our undergraduate degrees and moving to Detroit. Matt and I have overlapping skill sets, but we have disparate approaches to design. Matt works intuitively, while my approach is more analytic and rigorous. Sometimes that makes it hard to work together, but we both agree that our projects are better for it in the end.
Beam Single Interview: Southern Resourcefulness and Ingenuity of Holler Design
Davis Credenza Interview: Southern Resourcefulness and Ingenuity of Holler Design
Davis Credenza Detail Interview: Southern Resourcefulness and Ingenuity of Holler Design
  • Freshome: In the three years since you started the business, which project was the most provocative?
  • Holler Design: We recently designed a piece as a response to a project brief for a design show in Atlanta. The show, an off-site event associated with Modern Atlanta, enlisted designers to address the word 'Fixed'. Our entry Beam is created from reclaimed pine barn beams and held together with bowdock pegs…a traditional timber framed barn construction method. Then we burn the sides or top to generate a rich black finish and finally seal with polyurethane. Up to this point, most of our designs have been rather complex and involved, and thus demand a higher price point. Beam is compact and easier to fabricate than our other products. It responds to the project brief conceptually, but it also literally 'fixes' a problem we had with our product line by offering one of our designs at a more attainable cost.
  • Freshome: Where do you find inspiration for your projects?
  • Holler Design: Traditional American furniture, barns, traditional wood joinery, the culture of the southeast, contemporary design, music…
FarmBench Interview: Southern Resourcefulness and Ingenuity of Holler Design
FarmBench Detail Interview: Southern Resourcefulness and Ingenuity of Holler Design
  • Freshome: How do you market your business and who are your clients?
  • Holler Design: We’ve been pretty fortunate with both local and national editorial coverage, so most of our clients find us that way or by word of mouth. We were also lucky enough to have an online flash sale with Fab.com, where we sold out of Beam stools in three hours! Our clients are typically design conscious professionals. I think most of them appreciate the value of small scale American manufacturing.
  • Freshome: How does your design philosophy integrate in your daily lives?
  • Holler Design:Our design philosophy is more akin to buying local, organic food from your farmer’s market. All our wood is sourced locally, most of it right off the farm. Our fabrication techniques are inherently sustainable. In our personal lives we try to seek out companies with similar philosophies. Both Matt and I come from humble roots: Matt's father is a farmer, while mine is in the tool and die business. So we know that not everybody, (including us!) can afford the highest quality in all their purchases. But what we tell our clients (indeed, what we try to practice ourselves) is that paying a little more for something American made, sustainably produced, and built to last a lifetime is an investment. After all, you aren't really buying it for yourself…you are buying it for your grandkids.
Farmhouse Bathroom Renovation 1 Interview: Southern Resourcefulness and Ingenuity of Holler Design
Farmhouse Bathroom Renovation 2 Interview: Southern Resourcefulness and Ingenuity of Holler Design
Farmhouse Bathroom Renovation 3 Interview: Southern Resourcefulness and Ingenuity of Holler Design
  • Freshome: You say that your work is inspired by rural forms and textures. Can you describe the process from idea to finished product?
  • Holler Design: If we are doing a custom design for a client, we start by sitting down and having a discussion…what is the purpose of the piece, how will it be used, what type of room will it be in, what other furniture will be close to it, etc. We then create at least three distinct options: the first option is always the most straight-forward iteration, while the other options approach the design with different perspectives. The final choice is always up to the client, but sometimes we take the option we like best and develop it for ourselves! Our BentDesk was developed in this way. In our own furniture line, we try to rethink and reinvent traditional typologies. For example, with Rocker03 we began by analysing a series of antique ladderback chairs belonging to Matt's father…scale and dimension, joinery, wood type, caning, etc. Our interpretation employs the same ladderback proportions and aesthetics, but is completely redesigned to employ modern CNC milling technologies. The result is a sensuous, sleek silhouette that is at home in both grandma's house and your urban loft. With our FarmBench, we started with large planks of pristine reclaimed pine, with the weathered finish intact. After assembly, everywhere we've carved into the planks we highlight with a water based, brightly colored lacquer. We really like the playful quality of the bright color juxtaposed against the weathered pine.
Harris Bed 1 Interview: Southern Resourcefulness and Ingenuity of Holler Design
Harris Bed 2 Interview: Southern Resourcefulness and Ingenuity of Holler Design
Harris Bed 3 Interview: Southern Resourcefulness and Ingenuity of Holler Design
  • Freshome: How did your life influence the decision of starting HollerDesign?
  • Holler Design: If you follow us on Twitter, you’ll see our description as “Two Southerners who have left home and returned with an imperative of what it means to be Southern, and a desire to share that view with others.” In our estimation, being Southern is less about cliche ideas of hospitality and friendliness. It has more to do with a pervading sense of resourcefulness and ingenuity…something our colleagues at the Southern Design Concern call 'bootstrappy-ness.' One of our favorite quotes is from the late demographer Calvin Beale. He said Southerners aren't "barefooted hillbillies given to moon shining and quite disinclined to work for a living," but that we are "inclined to self-sufficiency and simple living, [with a] widespread interest in environmentalism, conservation, alternative fuel sources, rural aesthetic values, home food production, and local self-government.’
Rocker03 Front Interview: Southern Resourcefulness and Ingenuity of Holler Design
Rocker03 Detail Interview: Southern Resourcefulness and Ingenuity of Holler Design
  • Freshome: Both you and your husband have extensive knowledge of architecture, design and fine arts. What do you think would be another great addition to your field of interest? What would you like to learn next?
  • Holler Design: If I didn’t have to sleep, I would love to learn more about poetry. Being specific and finding just the right word is very important to me, and sometimes the right combination of words can speak volumes. (For example, in one poem e.e. cummings describes Spring as “when the world is puddle-wonderful”. Isn’t that somehow perfect?) Matt's latest endeavor is beekeeping. It's slightly HollerD related, in that he's been researching traditional wood finishes and thought having a homegrown supply of beeswax would be nifty. But the bees are also terribly interesting little creatures. It's been exciting watching the stack of hive supers get taller all summer.
Sprout Foods Office 1 Interview: Southern Resourcefulness and Ingenuity of Holler Design
Sprout Foods Office 2 Interview: Southern Resourcefulness and Ingenuity of Holler Design
  • Freshome: If your weekdays are filled with work, your weekends must be filled with inspiration. How do you spend your free time?
  • Holler Design: As I’m sure any husband and wife partnership will agree, it is crucial to carve out some ‘normal marriage’ time on the weekends. Not that we don’t chat about ideas for future projects and such, but we try to keep business talk to a minimum. Being in the ‘Music City’, we of course enjoy seeing live music shows (most recently the Carolina Chocolate Drops). We also enjoy museums and gallery events, as well as more traditional Southern pastimes such as gardening, beekeeping, home brewing, porchswingin’, and lazy walks across the farm.
HollerDesign Fabrication Shop Exterior Interview: Southern Resourcefulness and Ingenuity of Holler Design
HollerDesign Fabrication Shop Interior Interview: Southern Resourcefulness and Ingenuity of Holler Design
  • Freshome: How do you see your work evolving in the future?
  • Holler Design: We have a couple of ideas for future expansion, such as devoting more time to our interior design & architecture services. So far we've tackled an office renovation and a farmhouse bathroom renovation, but we would love to design interiors for a restaurant! Another ambition is opening a retail store where we could offer our furniture, along with other high quality, handmade, local goods, such as Emil Erwin bags, Otis James clothing, or Borough Furnace iron goods.

Source: http://freshome.com/2011/08/11/interview-southern-resourcefulness-and-ingenuity-of-holler-design/
 

TopOfBlogs