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Chambers Architects in collaboration with Ralph Hawkins, HKS, Inc.
This residence is executed with clarity and simplicity of the owner’s modernist sensibilities, integrated with our firm’s regionalist convictions. In collaboration with the client who is an architect himself, we created a home that is thoroughly modern in its use of space, light, massing, and proportion.
Regional character was achieved through the abstraction of elements of Texas culture. The home features a massive central wall with stone lintels which penetrates the external walls of the house. It uses a regional matrix of massive Texas limestone blocks, standing seam metal roof, dry stack stone wall at entry, and deep-shaded back porch, characteristic of Texas Hill Country homes.
This image is part of the Modern Architecture in Edinburgh exhibition on www.capitalcollections.org.uk
Young/Belanger Residence
Designers: A-1 Construction, then Rob Rubin of The Construction Zone
Completion: 100%
Style: Midcentury Modern/Contemporary
Model: The Cholla
Notes: Rob Rubin of the Construction Zone added on an entire master suite on the back side of the home. One of the old bedrooms serves as a clever transitional space between the adult area and child's wing. Built-in cabinetry helps to maximize the space and minimize clutter. The kitchen cabinets are faced with hot rolled steel.
Contact: theconstructionzoneltd.com
Neighbor Dana Schuette talks with architect Rob Rubin.
Modern Phoenix Expo exhibitor and sculputor John Tuomisto-Bell and his wife Julie.
This image is a fairly accurate description of the most of current commercial architecture in London.
Mueller Design is a full-service firm offering residential and commercial architectural services, interior design, space planning, old-world residential renovations, hillside construction, site planning, landscape design, and project management with offices in Los Angeles and New York.
Both buildings are NHS buildings. Not the conventional, bland, nationalised fare.
Taken as a "modern architecture" photograph for Tom Ang's "Digital Photography Month By Month" subject for March.
The Knoxville Library project was designed in my 3rd year of architecture school. The main book stack portion of the library was oriented to create a continuous street frontage elevation and at the same time putting the program of the building on display to the public. This section of the building was actually imagined as a large scale set of book shelves. This portion of the building was largely glass w/ louvers on the exterior to protect the books from sun damage. Behind the main book stacks on the site is the "academic village" composed of reading rooms and auditorium space. The two smaller pods are reading and class space for young adults and children. The larger football shaped pod contains the adult reading areas, study spaces, and auditorium on the ground floor. This monolithic concrete structure was situated to sit in a reflecting pool that provided unique lighting conditions on the interior.