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Interior and Roof & Rear Extension Project Renderings

Interior and Roof & Rear Extension Project Renderings

Interior and Roof & Rear Extension Project Renderings

free-shaped home

futuristic architecture of israel

new trend eco-friendly house

zen architecture

bio-house

organic architecture

ferrocement concrete shells

voile de beton

zero-emission solar powered hydrogen fuel-cell

pv-cells

biomorphic curved bay windows

biomorphism blobbism bubble-house

maison-bulles palais-bulles luxurious-yacht feng-shui space-ship

nurbs-surfaces T-spline rhino revit green-house

bio-hotel - jerusalem area - israel

bed-and-breakfast - jerusalem area - israel

vacation-rentals in israel - jerusalem area - israel

dream residence - jerusalem area - israel

maison d'hotes - jerusalem area - israel

feng-shui energies

rapid prototyping

3D-CAD 3D-printing

Pavie-Architecture and Design for the Future

pavie.com

פנג שואי

אדריכלות אורגנית בית פאבי נווה דניאל גוש עציון הבית העגול עיצוב עתידני אדריכלות ירוקה צימרים איזור ירושלים אדריכלות ישראלית עכשיווית

אפרים פאווי - אפרים הנרי פאבי

pavie.co.il : פאבי אדריכלים

www.studioboron.com

 

A house in a Conservation area, with the project consisting of a loft extension at the rear gable roof and a kitchen rear extension.

The loft extension will be a zinc roof cover with a 2 windows and a roof light to allow natural light into the central part of the house. The metal colour of the zinc will match the colour of the window frames, for an integrated aesthetic. The proposal will also remodel an extent of the interiors but this interior work will not require planning. The kitchen design will elongate the kitchen and a sliding fire door will be created in the design to create a protected stair. The living room will

include a new fire door to form a protected stair as well.

The rest of the house include renovations to ensuite bathroom, a larger closet, children's bedrooms and bathroom extension.

 

Honestly, it was journey and a good lessons learned. Some lessons include

1. Making 100% sure before the contractor is hired that they will comply and sign a contract with the client. Here they did an agreement and this is where everything goes wrong, including massive changes of the design, without my knowledge. Many rooms as not as I designed them.

2. Even without a contract to contract adminstrator, I should have been on site every week, as the stair design was completely messed up by the contractor, even though the drawings show something aligned. Samples of every material should have been taken before being applied on the walls, ceilings etc. The children's room was designed without wood, for example.

3. Looking at details such as unaligned downlights and light in the complete different location, not as per drawings at hand.

4. Using a closet and kitchen supplier right away and just laying out the idea, which I mostly did.

5. Getting the client's full trust in designing items as we went through the architectural stages, rather than designing later on with the contractor.

Interior and Roof & Rear Extension Project Renderings

Interior and Roof & Rear Extension Project Renderings

Concept Design Retail Store

Early Revit 3.1

www.studioboron.com

 

A house in a Conservation area, with the project consisting of a loft extension at the rear gable roof and a kitchen rear extension.

The loft extension will be a zinc roof cover with a 2 windows and a roof light to allow natural light into the central part of the house. The metal colour of the zinc will match the colour of the window frames, for an integrated aesthetic. The proposal will also remodel an extent of the interiors but this interior work will not require planning. The kitchen design will elongate the kitchen and a sliding fire door will be created in the design to create a protected stair. The living room will

include a new fire door to form a protected stair as well.

The rest of the house include renovations to ensuite bathroom, a larger closet, children's bedrooms and bathroom extension.

 

Honestly, it was journey and a good lessons learned. Some lessons include

1. Making 100% sure before the contractor is hired that they will comply and sign a contract with the client. Here they did an agreement and this is where everything goes wrong, including massive changes of the design, without my knowledge. Many rooms as not as I designed them.

2. Even without a contract to contract adminstrator, I should have been on site every week, as the stair design was completely messed up by the contractor, even though the drawings show something aligned. Samples of every material should have been taken before being applied on the walls, ceilings etc. The children's room was designed without wood, for example.

3. Looking at details such as unaligned downlights and light in the complete different location, not as per drawings at hand.

4. Using a closet and kitchen supplier right away and just laying out the idea, which I mostly did.

5. Getting the client's full trust in designing items as we went through the architectural stages, rather than designing later on with the contractor.

www.studioboron.com

 

A house in a Conservation area, with the project consisting of a loft extension at the rear gable roof and a kitchen rear extension.

The loft extension will be a zinc roof cover with a 2 windows and a roof light to allow natural light into the central part of the house. The metal colour of the zinc will match the colour of the window frames, for an integrated aesthetic. The proposal will also remodel an extent of the interiors but this interior work will not require planning. The kitchen design will elongate the kitchen and a sliding fire door will be created in the design to create a protected stair. The living room will

include a new fire door to form a protected stair as well.

The rest of the house include renovations to ensuite bathroom, a larger closet, children's bedrooms and bathroom extension.

 

Honestly, it was journey and a good lessons learned. Some lessons include

1. Making 100% sure before the contractor is hired that they will comply and sign a contract with the client. Here they did an agreement and this is where everything goes wrong, including massive changes of the design, without my knowledge. Many rooms as not as I designed them.

2. Even without a contract to contract adminstrator, I should have been on site every week, as the stair design was completely messed up by the contractor, even though the drawings show something aligned. Samples of every material should have been taken before being applied on the walls, ceilings etc. The children's room was designed without wood, for example.

3. Looking at details such as unaligned downlights and light in the complete different location, not as per drawings at hand.

4. Using a closet and kitchen supplier right away and just laying out the idea, which I mostly did.

5. Getting the client's full trust in designing items as we went through the architectural stages, rather than designing later on with the contractor.

Rayvat Rendering offers #Revit #architecture #modelling services at a low cost. We are a leading #rendering service #provider that offer top quality services.

 

www.studioboron.com

 

A house in a Conservation area, with the project consisting of a loft extension at the rear gable roof and a kitchen rear extension.

The loft extension will be a zinc roof cover with a 2 windows and a roof light to allow natural light into the central part of the house. The metal colour of the zinc will match the colour of the window frames, for an integrated aesthetic. The proposal will also remodel an extent of the interiors but this interior work will not require planning. The kitchen design will elongate the kitchen and a sliding fire door will be created in the design to create a protected stair. The living room will

include a new fire door to form a protected stair as well.

The rest of the house include renovations to ensuite bathroom, a larger closet, children's bedrooms and bathroom extension.

 

Honestly, it was journey and a good lessons learned. Some lessons include

1. Making 100% sure before the contractor is hired that they will comply and sign a contract with the client. Here they did an agreement and this is where everything goes wrong, including massive changes of the design, without my knowledge. Many rooms as not as I designed them.

2. Even without a contract to contract adminstrator, I should have been on site every week, as the stair design was completely messed up by the contractor, even though the drawings show something aligned. Samples of every material should have been taken before being applied on the walls, ceilings etc. The children's room was designed without wood, for example.

3. Looking at details such as unaligned downlights and light in the complete different location, not as per drawings at hand.

4. Using a closet and kitchen supplier right away and just laying out the idea, which I mostly did.

5. Getting the client's full trust in designing items as we went through the architectural stages, rather than designing later on with the contractor.

www.studioboron.com

 

A house in a Conservation area, with the project consisting of a loft extension at the rear gable roof and a kitchen rear extension.

The loft extension will be a zinc roof cover with a 2 windows and a roof light to allow natural light into the central part of the house. The metal colour of the zinc will match the colour of the window frames, for an integrated aesthetic. The proposal will also remodel an extent of the interiors but this interior work will not require planning. The kitchen design will elongate the kitchen and a sliding fire door will be created in the design to create a protected stair. The living room will

include a new fire door to form a protected stair as well.

The rest of the house include renovations to ensuite bathroom, a larger closet, children's bedrooms and bathroom extension.

 

Honestly, it was journey and a good lessons learned. Some lessons include

1. Making 100% sure before the contractor is hired that they will comply and sign a contract with the client. Here they did an agreement and this is where everything goes wrong, including massive changes of the design, without my knowledge. Many rooms as not as I designed them.

2. Even without a contract to contract adminstrator, I should have been on site every week, as the stair design was completely messed up by the contractor, even though the drawings show something aligned. Samples of every material should have been taken before being applied on the walls, ceilings etc. The children's room was designed without wood, for example.

3. Looking at details such as unaligned downlights and light in the complete different location, not as per drawings at hand.

4. Using a closet and kitchen supplier right away and just laying out the idea, which I mostly did.

5. Getting the client's full trust in designing items as we went through the architectural stages, rather than designing later on with the contractor.

www.studioboron.com

 

A house in a Conservation area, with the project consisting of a loft extension at the rear gable roof and a kitchen rear extension.

The loft extension will be a zinc roof cover with a 2 windows and a roof light to allow natural light into the central part of the house. The metal colour of the zinc will match the colour of the window frames, for an integrated aesthetic. The proposal will also remodel an extent of the interiors but this interior work will not require planning. The kitchen design will elongate the kitchen and a sliding fire door will be created in the design to create a protected stair. The living room will

include a new fire door to form a protected stair as well.

The rest of the house include renovations to ensuite bathroom, a larger closet, children's bedrooms and bathroom extension.

 

Honestly, it was journey and a good lessons learned. Some lessons include

1. Making 100% sure before the contractor is hired that they will comply and sign a contract with the client. Here they did an agreement and this is where everything goes wrong, including massive changes of the design, without my knowledge. Many rooms as not as I designed them.

2. Even without a contract to contract adminstrator, I should have been on site every week, as the stair design was completely messed up by the contractor, even though the drawings show something aligned. Samples of every material should have been taken before being applied on the walls, ceilings etc. The children's room was designed without wood, for example.

3. Looking at details such as unaligned downlights and light in the complete different location, not as per drawings at hand.

4. Using a closet and kitchen supplier right away and just laying out the idea, which I mostly did.

5. Getting the client's full trust in designing items as we went through the architectural stages, rather than designing later on with the contractor.

www.studioboron.com

 

A house in a Conservation area, with the project consisting of a loft extension at the rear gable roof and a kitchen rear extension.

The loft extension will be a zinc roof cover with a 2 windows and a roof light to allow natural light into the central part of the house. The metal colour of the zinc will match the colour of the window frames, for an integrated aesthetic. The proposal will also remodel an extent of the interiors but this interior work will not require planning. The kitchen design will elongate the kitchen and a sliding fire door will be created in the design to create a protected stair. The living room will

include a new fire door to form a protected stair as well.

The rest of the house include renovations to ensuite bathroom, a larger closet, children's bedrooms and bathroom extension.

 

Honestly, it was journey and a good lessons learned. Some lessons include

1. Making 100% sure before the contractor is hired that they will comply and sign a contract with the client. Here they did an agreement and this is where everything goes wrong, including massive changes of the design, without my knowledge. Many rooms as not as I designed them.

2. Even without a contract to contract adminstrator, I should have been on site every week, as the stair design was completely messed up by the contractor, even though the drawings show something aligned. Samples of every material should have been taken before being applied on the walls, ceilings etc. The children's room was designed without wood, for example.

3. Looking at details such as unaligned downlights and light in the complete different location, not as per drawings at hand.

4. Using a closet and kitchen supplier right away and just laying out the idea, which I mostly did.

5. Getting the client's full trust in designing items as we went through the architectural stages, rather than designing later on with the contractor.

Explorers of a new world. I'd rent an apartment here. Seriously.

www.studioboron.com

 

A house in a Conservation area, with the project consisting of a loft extension at the rear gable roof and a kitchen rear extension.

The loft extension will be a zinc roof cover with a 2 windows and a roof light to allow natural light into the central part of the house. The metal colour of the zinc will match the colour of the window frames, for an integrated aesthetic. The proposal will also remodel an extent of the interiors but this interior work will not require planning. The kitchen design will elongate the kitchen and a sliding fire door will be created in the design to create a protected stair. The living room will

include a new fire door to form a protected stair as well.

The rest of the house include renovations to ensuite bathroom, a larger closet, children's bedrooms and bathroom extension.

 

Honestly, it was journey and a good lessons learned. Some lessons include

1. Making 100% sure before the contractor is hired that they will comply and sign a contract with the client. Here they did an agreement and this is where everything goes wrong, including massive changes of the design, without my knowledge. Many rooms as not as I designed them.

2. Even without a contract to contract adminstrator, I should have been on site every week, as the stair design was completely messed up by the contractor, even though the drawings show something aligned. Samples of every material should have been taken before being applied on the walls, ceilings etc. The children's room was designed without wood, for example.

3. Looking at details such as unaligned downlights and light in the complete different location, not as per drawings at hand.

4. Using a closet and kitchen supplier right away and just laying out the idea, which I mostly did.

5. Getting the client's full trust in designing items as we went through the architectural stages, rather than designing later on with the contractor.

www.studioboron.com

 

A house in a Conservation area, with the project consisting of a loft extension at the rear gable roof and a kitchen rear extension.

The loft extension will be a zinc roof cover with a 2 windows and a roof light to allow natural light into the central part of the house. The metal colour of the zinc will match the colour of the window frames, for an integrated aesthetic. The proposal will also remodel an extent of the interiors but this interior work will not require planning. The kitchen design will elongate the kitchen and a sliding fire door will be created in the design to create a protected stair. The living room will

include a new fire door to form a protected stair as well.

The rest of the house include renovations to ensuite bathroom, a larger closet, children's bedrooms and bathroom extension.

 

Honestly, it was journey and a good lessons learned. Some lessons include

1. Making 100% sure before the contractor is hired that they will comply and sign a contract with the client. Here they did an agreement and this is where everything goes wrong, including massive changes of the design, without my knowledge. Many rooms as not as I designed them.

2. Even without a contract to contract adminstrator, I should have been on site every week, as the stair design was completely messed up by the contractor, even though the drawings show something aligned. Samples of every material should have been taken before being applied on the walls, ceilings etc. The children's room was designed without wood, for example.

3. Looking at details such as unaligned downlights and light in the complete different location, not as per drawings at hand.

4. Using a closet and kitchen supplier right away and just laying out the idea, which I mostly did.

5. Getting the client's full trust in designing items as we went through the architectural stages, rather than designing later on with the contractor.

www.studioboron.com

 

A house in a Conservation area, with the project consisting of a loft extension at the rear gable roof and a kitchen rear extension.

The loft extension will be a zinc roof cover with a 2 windows and a roof light to allow natural light into the central part of the house. The metal colour of the zinc will match the colour of the window frames, for an integrated aesthetic. The proposal will also remodel an extent of the interiors but this interior work will not require planning. The kitchen design will elongate the kitchen and a sliding fire door will be created in the design to create a protected stair. The living room will

include a new fire door to form a protected stair as well.

The rest of the house include renovations to ensuite bathroom, a larger closet, children's bedrooms and bathroom extension.

 

Honestly, it was journey and a good lessons learned. Some lessons include

1. Making 100% sure before the contractor is hired that they will comply and sign a contract with the client. Here they did an agreement and this is where everything goes wrong, including massive changes of the design, without my knowledge. Many rooms as not as I designed them.

2. Even without a contract to contract adminstrator, I should have been on site every week, as the stair design was completely messed up by the contractor, even though the drawings show something aligned. Samples of every material should have been taken before being applied on the walls, ceilings etc. The children's room was designed without wood, for example.

3. Looking at details such as unaligned downlights and light in the complete different location, not as per drawings at hand.

4. Using a closet and kitchen supplier right away and just laying out the idea, which I mostly did.

5. Getting the client's full trust in designing items as we went through the architectural stages, rather than designing later on with the contractor.

www.studioboron.com

 

A house in a Conservation area, with the project consisting of a loft extension at the rear gable roof and a kitchen rear extension.

The loft extension will be a zinc roof cover with a 2 windows and a roof light to allow natural light into the central part of the house. The metal colour of the zinc will match the colour of the window frames, for an integrated aesthetic. The proposal will also remodel an extent of the interiors but this interior work will not require planning. The kitchen design will elongate the kitchen and a sliding fire door will be created in the design to create a protected stair. The living room will

include a new fire door to form a protected stair as well.

The rest of the house include renovations to ensuite bathroom, a larger closet, children's bedrooms and bathroom extension.

 

Honestly, it was journey and a good lessons learned. Some lessons include

1. Making 100% sure before the contractor is hired that they will comply and sign a contract with the client. Here they did an agreement and this is where everything goes wrong, including massive changes of the design, without my knowledge. Many rooms as not as I designed them.

2. Even without a contract to contract adminstrator, I should have been on site every week, as the stair design was completely messed up by the contractor, even though the drawings show something aligned. Samples of every material should have been taken before being applied on the walls, ceilings etc. The children's room was designed without wood, for example.

3. Looking at details such as unaligned downlights and light in the complete different location, not as per drawings at hand.

4. Using a closet and kitchen supplier right away and just laying out the idea, which I mostly did.

5. Getting the client's full trust in designing items as we went through the architectural stages, rather than designing later on with the contractor.

www.studioboron.com

 

A house in a Conservation area, with the project consisting of a loft extension at the rear gable roof and a kitchen rear extension.

The loft extension will be a zinc roof cover with a 2 windows and a roof light to allow natural light into the central part of the house. The metal colour of the zinc will match the colour of the window frames, for an integrated aesthetic. The proposal will also remodel an extent of the interiors but this interior work will not require planning. The kitchen design will elongate the kitchen and a sliding fire door will be created in the design to create a protected stair. The living room will

include a new fire door to form a protected stair as well.

The rest of the house include renovations to ensuite bathroom, a larger closet, children's bedrooms and bathroom extension.

 

Honestly, it was journey and a good lessons learned. Some lessons include

1. Making 100% sure before the contractor is hired that they will comply and sign a contract with the client. Here they did an agreement and this is where everything goes wrong, including massive changes of the design, without my knowledge. Many rooms as not as I designed them.

2. Even without a contract to contract adminstrator, I should have been on site every week, as the stair design was completely messed up by the contractor, even though the drawings show something aligned. Samples of every material should have been taken before being applied on the walls, ceilings etc. The children's room was designed without wood, for example.

3. Looking at details such as unaligned downlights and light in the complete different location, not as per drawings at hand.

4. Using a closet and kitchen supplier right away and just laying out the idea, which I mostly did.

5. Getting the client's full trust in designing items as we went through the architectural stages, rather than designing later on with the contractor.

www.studioboron.com

 

A house in a Conservation area, with the project consisting of a loft extension at the rear gable roof and a kitchen rear extension.

The loft extension will be a zinc roof cover with a 2 windows and a roof light to allow natural light into the central part of the house. The metal colour of the zinc will match the colour of the window frames, for an integrated aesthetic. The proposal will also remodel an extent of the interiors but this interior work will not require planning. The kitchen design will elongate the kitchen and a sliding fire door will be created in the design to create a protected stair. The living room will

include a new fire door to form a protected stair as well.

The rest of the house include renovations to ensuite bathroom, a larger closet, children's bedrooms and bathroom extension.

 

Honestly, it was journey and a good lessons learned. Some lessons include

1. Making 100% sure before the contractor is hired that they will comply and sign a contract with the client. Here they did an agreement and this is where everything goes wrong, including massive changes of the design, without my knowledge. Many rooms as not as I designed them.

2. Even without a contract to contract adminstrator, I should have been on site every week, as the stair design was completely messed up by the contractor, even though the drawings show something aligned. Samples of every material should have been taken before being applied on the walls, ceilings etc. The children's room was designed without wood, for example.

3. Looking at details such as unaligned downlights and light in the complete different location, not as per drawings at hand.

4. Using a closet and kitchen supplier right away and just laying out the idea, which I mostly did.

5. Getting the client's full trust in designing items as we went through the architectural stages, rather than designing later on with the contractor.

www.studioboron.com

 

A house in a Conservation area, with the project consisting of a loft extension at the rear gable roof and a kitchen rear extension.

The loft extension will be a zinc roof cover with a 2 windows and a roof light to allow natural light into the central part of the house. The metal colour of the zinc will match the colour of the window frames, for an integrated aesthetic. The proposal will also remodel an extent of the interiors but this interior work will not require planning. The kitchen design will elongate the kitchen and a sliding fire door will be created in the design to create a protected stair. The living room will

include a new fire door to form a protected stair as well.

The rest of the house include renovations to ensuite bathroom, a larger closet, children's bedrooms and bathroom extension.

 

Honestly, it was journey and a good lessons learned. Some lessons include

1. Making 100% sure before the contractor is hired that they will comply and sign a contract with the client. Here they did an agreement and this is where everything goes wrong, including massive changes of the design, without my knowledge. Many rooms as not as I designed them.

2. Even without a contract to contract adminstrator, I should have been on site every week, as the stair design was completely messed up by the contractor, even though the drawings show something aligned. Samples of every material should have been taken before being applied on the walls, ceilings etc. The children's room was designed without wood, for example.

3. Looking at details such as unaligned downlights and light in the complete different location, not as per drawings at hand.

4. Using a closet and kitchen supplier right away and just laying out the idea, which I mostly did.

5. Getting the client's full trust in designing items as we went through the architectural stages, rather than designing later on with the contractor.

www.studioboron.com

 

A house in a Conservation area, with the project consisting of a loft extension at the rear gable roof and a kitchen rear extension.

The loft extension will be a zinc roof cover with a 2 windows and a roof light to allow natural light into the central part of the house. The metal colour of the zinc will match the colour of the window frames, for an integrated aesthetic. The proposal will also remodel an extent of the interiors but this interior work will not require planning. The kitchen design will elongate the kitchen and a sliding fire door will be created in the design to create a protected stair. The living room will

include a new fire door to form a protected stair as well.

The rest of the house include renovations to ensuite bathroom, a larger closet, children's bedrooms and bathroom extension.

 

Honestly, it was journey and a good lessons learned. Some lessons include

1. Making 100% sure before the contractor is hired that they will comply and sign a contract with the client. Here they did an agreement and this is where everything goes wrong, including massive changes of the design, without my knowledge. Many rooms as not as I designed them.

2. Even without a contract to contract adminstrator, I should have been on site every week, as the stair design was completely messed up by the contractor, even though the drawings show something aligned. Samples of every material should have been taken before being applied on the walls, ceilings etc. The children's room was designed without wood, for example.

3. Looking at details such as unaligned downlights and light in the complete different location, not as per drawings at hand.

4. Using a closet and kitchen supplier right away and just laying out the idea, which I mostly did.

5. Getting the client's full trust in designing items as we went through the architectural stages, rather than designing later on with the contractor.

www.studioboron.com

 

A house in a Conservation area, with the project consisting of a loft extension at the rear gable roof and a kitchen rear extension.

The loft extension will be a zinc roof cover with a 2 windows and a roof light to allow natural light into the central part of the house. The metal colour of the zinc will match the colour of the window frames, for an integrated aesthetic. The proposal will also remodel an extent of the interiors but this interior work will not require planning. The kitchen design will elongate the kitchen and a sliding fire door will be created in the design to create a protected stair. The living room will

include a new fire door to form a protected stair as well.

The rest of the house include renovations to ensuite bathroom, a larger closet, children's bedrooms and bathroom extension.

 

Honestly, it was journey and a good lessons learned. Some lessons include

1. Making 100% sure before the contractor is hired that they will comply and sign a contract with the client. Here they did an agreement and this is where everything goes wrong, including massive changes of the design, without my knowledge. Many rooms as not as I designed them.

2. Even without a contract to contract adminstrator, I should have been on site every week, as the stair design was completely messed up by the contractor, even though the drawings show something aligned. Samples of every material should have been taken before being applied on the walls, ceilings etc. The children's room was designed without wood, for example.

3. Looking at details such as unaligned downlights and light in the complete different location, not as per drawings at hand.

4. Using a closet and kitchen supplier right away and just laying out the idea, which I mostly did.

5. Getting the client's full trust in designing items as we went through the architectural stages, rather than designing later on with the contractor.

www.studioboron.com

 

A house in a Conservation area, with the project consisting of a loft extension at the rear gable roof and a kitchen rear extension.

The loft extension will be a zinc roof cover with a 2 windows and a roof light to allow natural light into the central part of the house. The metal colour of the zinc will match the colour of the window frames, for an integrated aesthetic. The proposal will also remodel an extent of the interiors but this interior work will not require planning. The kitchen design will elongate the kitchen and a sliding fire door will be created in the design to create a protected stair. The living room will

include a new fire door to form a protected stair as well.

The rest of the house include renovations to ensuite bathroom, a larger closet, children's bedrooms and bathroom extension.

 

Honestly, it was journey and a good lessons learned. Some lessons include

1. Making 100% sure before the contractor is hired that they will comply and sign a contract with the client. Here they did an agreement and this is where everything goes wrong, including massive changes of the design, without my knowledge. Many rooms as not as I designed them.

2. Even without a contract to contract adminstrator, I should have been on site every week, as the stair design was completely messed up by the contractor, even though the drawings show something aligned. Samples of every material should have been taken before being applied on the walls, ceilings etc. The children's room was designed without wood, for example.

3. Looking at details such as unaligned downlights and light in the complete different location, not as per drawings at hand.

4. Using a closet and kitchen supplier right away and just laying out the idea, which I mostly did.

5. Getting the client's full trust in designing items as we went through the architectural stages, rather than designing later on with the contractor.

Beautiful spiral stairscase created in Revit

www.studioboron.com

 

A house in a Conservation area, with the project consisting of a loft extension at the rear gable roof and a kitchen rear extension.

The loft extension will be a zinc roof cover with a 2 windows and a roof light to allow natural light into the central part of the house. The metal colour of the zinc will match the colour of the window frames, for an integrated aesthetic. The proposal will also remodel an extent of the interiors but this interior work will not require planning. The kitchen design will elongate the kitchen and a sliding fire door will be created in the design to create a protected stair. The living room will

include a new fire door to form a protected stair as well.

The rest of the house include renovations to ensuite bathroom, a larger closet, children's bedrooms and bathroom extension.

 

Honestly, it was journey and a good lessons learned. Some lessons include

1. Making 100% sure before the contractor is hired that they will comply and sign a contract with the client. Here they did an agreement and this is where everything goes wrong, including massive changes of the design, without my knowledge. Many rooms as not as I designed them.

2. Even without a contract to contract adminstrator, I should have been on site every week, as the stair design was completely messed up by the contractor, even though the drawings show something aligned. Samples of every material should have been taken before being applied on the walls, ceilings etc. The children's room was designed without wood, for example.

3. Looking at details such as unaligned downlights and light in the complete different location, not as per drawings at hand.

4. Using a closet and kitchen supplier right away and just laying out the idea, which I mostly did.

5. Getting the client's full trust in designing items as we went through the architectural stages, rather than designing later on with the contractor.

www.studioboron.com

 

A house in a Conservation area, with the project consisting of a loft extension at the rear gable roof and a kitchen rear extension.

The loft extension will be a zinc roof cover with a 2 windows and a roof light to allow natural light into the central part of the house. The metal colour of the zinc will match the colour of the window frames, for an integrated aesthetic. The proposal will also remodel an extent of the interiors but this interior work will not require planning. The kitchen design will elongate the kitchen and a sliding fire door will be created in the design to create a protected stair. The living room will

include a new fire door to form a protected stair as well.

The rest of the house include renovations to ensuite bathroom, a larger closet, children's bedrooms and bathroom extension.

 

Honestly, it was journey and a good lessons learned. Some lessons include

1. Making 100% sure before the contractor is hired that they will comply and sign a contract with the client. Here they did an agreement and this is where everything goes wrong, including massive changes of the design, without my knowledge. Many rooms as not as I designed them.

2. Even without a contract to contract adminstrator, I should have been on site every week, as the stair design was completely messed up by the contractor, even though the drawings show something aligned. Samples of every material should have been taken before being applied on the walls, ceilings etc. The children's room was designed without wood, for example.

3. Looking at details such as unaligned downlights and light in the complete different location, not as per drawings at hand.

4. Using a closet and kitchen supplier right away and just laying out the idea, which I mostly did.

5. Getting the client's full trust in designing items as we went through the architectural stages, rather than designing later on with the contractor.

www.studioboron.com

 

A house in a Conservation area, with the project consisting of a loft extension at the rear gable roof and a kitchen rear extension.

The loft extension will be a zinc roof cover with a 2 windows and a roof light to allow natural light into the central part of the house. The metal colour of the zinc will match the colour of the window frames, for an integrated aesthetic. The proposal will also remodel an extent of the interiors but this interior work will not require planning. The kitchen design will elongate the kitchen and a sliding fire door will be created in the design to create a protected stair. The living room will

include a new fire door to form a protected stair as well.

The rest of the house include renovations to ensuite bathroom, a larger closet, children's bedrooms and bathroom extension.

 

Honestly, it was journey and a good lessons learned. Some lessons include

1. Making 100% sure before the contractor is hired that they will comply and sign a contract with the client. Here they did an agreement and this is where everything goes wrong, including massive changes of the design, without my knowledge. Many rooms as not as I designed them.

2. Even without a contract to contract adminstrator, I should have been on site every week, as the stair design was completely messed up by the contractor, even though the drawings show something aligned. Samples of every material should have been taken before being applied on the walls, ceilings etc. The children's room was designed without wood, for example.

3. Looking at details such as unaligned downlights and light in the complete different location, not as per drawings at hand.

4. Using a closet and kitchen supplier right away and just laying out the idea, which I mostly did.

5. Getting the client's full trust in designing items as we went through the architectural stages, rather than designing later on with the contractor.

Cal Crutchlow GBR

WithU Yamaha RNF MotoGP Team

Yamaha

MotoGP

GP Aragon 2022 (Circuit Motorland Aragon)

16-18.09.2022

photo: Michelin

free-shaped home

futuristic architecture of israel

new trend eco-friendly house

zen architecture

bio-house

organic architecture

ferrocement concrete shells

voile de beton

zero-emission solar powered hydrogen fuel-cell

pv-cells

biomorphic curved bay windows

biomorphism blobbism bubble-house

maison-bulles palais-bulles luxurious-yacht feng-shui space-ship

nurbs-surfaces T-spline rhino revit green-house

bio-hotel - jerusalem area - israel

bed-and-breakfast - jerusalem area - israel

vacation-rentals in israel - jerusalem area - israel

dream residence - jerusalem area - israel

maison d'hotes - jerusalem area - israel

feng-shui energies

rapid prototyping

3D-CAD 3D-printing

Pavie-Architecture and Design for the Future

pavie.com

פנג שואי

אדריכלות אורגנית בית פאבי נווה דניאל גוש עציון הבית העגול עיצוב עתידני אדריכלות ירוקה צימרים איזור ירושלים אדריכלות ישראלית עכשיווית

אפרים פאווי - אפרים הנרי פאבי

pavie.co.il : פאבי אדריכלים

www.studioboron.com

 

A house in a Conservation area, with the project consisting of a loft extension at the rear gable roof and a kitchen rear extension.

The loft extension will be a zinc roof cover with a 2 windows and a roof light to allow natural light into the central part of the house. The metal colour of the zinc will match the colour of the window frames, for an integrated aesthetic. The proposal will also remodel an extent of the interiors but this interior work will not require planning. The kitchen design will elongate the kitchen and a sliding fire door will be created in the design to create a protected stair. The living room will

include a new fire door to form a protected stair as well.

The rest of the house include renovations to ensuite bathroom, a larger closet, children's bedrooms and bathroom extension.

 

Honestly, it was journey and a good lessons learned. Some lessons include

1. Making 100% sure before the contractor is hired that they will comply and sign a contract with the client. Here they did an agreement and this is where everything goes wrong, including massive changes of the design, without my knowledge. Many rooms as not as I designed them.

2. Even without a contract to contract adminstrator, I should have been on site every week, as the stair design was completely messed up by the contractor, even though the drawings show something aligned. Samples of every material should have been taken before being applied on the walls, ceilings etc. The children's room was designed without wood, for example.

3. Looking at details such as unaligned downlights and light in the complete different location, not as per drawings at hand.

4. Using a closet and kitchen supplier right away and just laying out the idea, which I mostly did.

5. Getting the client's full trust in designing items as we went through the architectural stages, rather than designing later on with the contractor.

www.studioboron.com

 

A house in a Conservation area, with the project consisting of a loft extension at the rear gable roof and a kitchen rear extension.

The loft extension will be a zinc roof cover with a 2 windows and a roof light to allow natural light into the central part of the house. The metal colour of the zinc will match the colour of the window frames, for an integrated aesthetic. The proposal will also remodel an extent of the interiors but this interior work will not require planning. The kitchen design will elongate the kitchen and a sliding fire door will be created in the design to create a protected stair. The living room will

include a new fire door to form a protected stair as well.

The rest of the house include renovations to ensuite bathroom, a larger closet, children's bedrooms and bathroom extension.

 

Honestly, it was journey and a good lessons learned. Some lessons include

1. Making 100% sure before the contractor is hired that they will comply and sign a contract with the client. Here they did an agreement and this is where everything goes wrong, including massive changes of the design, without my knowledge. Many rooms as not as I designed them.

2. Even without a contract to contract adminstrator, I should have been on site every week, as the stair design was completely messed up by the contractor, even though the drawings show something aligned. Samples of every material should have been taken before being applied on the walls, ceilings etc. The children's room was designed without wood, for example.

3. Looking at details such as unaligned downlights and light in the complete different location, not as per drawings at hand.

4. Using a closet and kitchen supplier right away and just laying out the idea, which I mostly did.

5. Getting the client's full trust in designing items as we went through the architectural stages, rather than designing later on with the contractor.

www.studioboron.com

 

A house in a Conservation area, with the project consisting of a loft extension at the rear gable roof and a kitchen rear extension.

The loft extension will be a zinc roof cover with a 2 windows and a roof light to allow natural light into the central part of the house. The metal colour of the zinc will match the colour of the window frames, for an integrated aesthetic. The proposal will also remodel an extent of the interiors but this interior work will not require planning. The kitchen design will elongate the kitchen and a sliding fire door will be created in the design to create a protected stair. The living room will

include a new fire door to form a protected stair as well.

The rest of the house include renovations to ensuite bathroom, a larger closet, children's bedrooms and bathroom extension.

 

Honestly, it was journey and a good lessons learned. Some lessons include

1. Making 100% sure before the contractor is hired that they will comply and sign a contract with the client. Here they did an agreement and this is where everything goes wrong, including massive changes of the design, without my knowledge. Many rooms as not as I designed them.

2. Even without a contract to contract adminstrator, I should have been on site every week, as the stair design was completely messed up by the contractor, even though the drawings show something aligned. Samples of every material should have been taken before being applied on the walls, ceilings etc. The children's room was designed without wood, for example.

3. Looking at details such as unaligned downlights and light in the complete different location, not as per drawings at hand.

4. Using a closet and kitchen supplier right away and just laying out the idea, which I mostly did.

5. Getting the client's full trust in designing items as we went through the architectural stages, rather than designing later on with the contractor.

www.studioboron.com

 

A house in a Conservation area, with the project consisting of a loft extension at the rear gable roof and a kitchen rear extension.

The loft extension will be a zinc roof cover with a 2 windows and a roof light to allow natural light into the central part of the house. The metal colour of the zinc will match the colour of the window frames, for an integrated aesthetic. The proposal will also remodel an extent of the interiors but this interior work will not require planning. The kitchen design will elongate the kitchen and a sliding fire door will be created in the design to create a protected stair. The living room will

include a new fire door to form a protected stair as well.

The rest of the house include renovations to ensuite bathroom, a larger closet, children's bedrooms and bathroom extension.

 

Honestly, it was journey and a good lessons learned. Some lessons include

1. Making 100% sure before the contractor is hired that they will comply and sign a contract with the client. Here they did an agreement and this is where everything goes wrong, including massive changes of the design, without my knowledge. Many rooms as not as I designed them.

2. Even without a contract to contract adminstrator, I should have been on site every week, as the stair design was completely messed up by the contractor, even though the drawings show something aligned. Samples of every material should have been taken before being applied on the walls, ceilings etc. The children's room was designed without wood, for example.

3. Looking at details such as unaligned downlights and light in the complete different location, not as per drawings at hand.

4. Using a closet and kitchen supplier right away and just laying out the idea, which I mostly did.

5. Getting the client's full trust in designing items as we went through the architectural stages, rather than designing later on with the contractor.

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