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Tag Archives: green architecture

A Look at Santa Monica’s Unique Hill House

30 Monday Apr 2012

Posted by Y2DC© in Lifestyle

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architecture, green architecture, Hill House, interior design, interior design companies, interior design consultants, los angeles architecture, los angeles interior design, luxury development, Santa Monica, Sustainable Architecture

Seated in Santa Monica, California’s Pacific Palisades, this house was advantageously planned to meet the restricted policy of the area. It also designed to promote safety and preserve the said landscape. The landscape of the area is one of the most important factors in selecting a house spot. Also it is made to take advantage of its volume considering its environmental effect.

This house is called the Hill House and it has three floors. It is built to create a more spacious and a friendly interior area. The central floor is where you can see the living room, kitchen and the dining room. It has a semi-private loft space above the main floor. The bedrooms are located in the ground floor.

The highlights of this house are sliding glass doors on the main floor and the skylight aperture. It is made of high quality materials such as concrete, steel and timber. Also it is covered with a special material that was colored to match the eucalyptus bark that is found in the place. Now, I am pretty sure that you are so excited to see the pictures that will justify my description of this Hill House. You may now look at the pictures below to fully see its features.

Hill House Front View 1

Looking at the front of this house can make you think of the secrets that can be revealed from the inside.

Hill House Front View 2

The role of the skylights in both the flat and sloped roofs added the typical distinction between the roof and its wall.

Hill House Exterior 1

The foundation of this house is nine 35-foot deep with the concrete piles.

Hill House Furniture

The lines and shape of this house complements with the arrangements of the chairs.

Hill House Furniture

Here is a glimpse of the simple dining room and kitchen.

Hill House Dining Room

The panoramic view is straightly seen from the dining room to the kitchen room.

Hill House Kitchen Room

You can see the area from the living room to the loft of this Hill House.

Hill House Interior 1

You may feel the freedom in exploring the different spots in this wide space of the house.

Hill House Bookshelves

Here is the loft where you can see their collections of reading materials that are perfectly arranged in these shelves.

Hill House Bedroom

You are now looking at the simple bedroom just found below the main floor.

Hill House Fixtures

Here is the sliding glass door in the main floor that emphasize the uniqueness of this house.

Hill House Kitchen Sink

The combination of white and silver color in this kitchen area stressed the cleanliness and neatness of this space.

Hill House Interior 2

For sure you can unwind here when you can see the landscape from the exterior.

Hill House Interior 3

The first rate furniture are excellently placed in its respective area.

Hill House Interior 4

This is the ideal area where you can sit down and read your favorite book.

Hill House Sketch Plan

This is the Sketch Plan of the Hill House.

Now we may say that the incredible shape of this house contains a very strong minimalist concept. The design of this house provides an opportunity to see the green view from the different parts of the house. Undeniably we are truly impressed on this Hill House which is made by Johnston Marklee. The designer is very creative and intelligent to come up with this kind of house.

You have witnessed how the designers wittingly planned where to put the different rooms in its respective place. The private areas of this house are the loft which is a studio and a bathroom in the basement. You can also see some California grasses that seem to form a blanket that covers the slope in the entire house. Thus we can say that if and only if we would have house design like this, our everyday life will be more peaceful and calm. Are you inspired to have a house design like this?

Green Roofs Are Changing Architecture: Kowloon Rail Terminus

30 Monday Apr 2012

Posted by Y2DC© in Lifestyle

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architecture, green architecture, hong kong, investing in hong kong property, Kowloon, Kowloon Rail Terminus, transportation, Victoria Peak

Lloyd Alter
Design / Green Architecture

It used to be that roofs were up top where nobody could see them, covered in gravel and full of mechanical equipment. Architectural renderings were pretty much all shot from eye level. Not anymore; green roof technology is making roofs into habitable architecture, and changing the way architects think of buildings.

The Express Rail Link – West Kowloon Terminus by Aedas will connect Hong Kong to the National High Speed Rail Network. The terminal’s roof is a series of ribbons that meet ground level, turning the building into a big walkable (climbable?) hill.

The architects tell Designboom:

Flowing ribbon pathways spread to the roof plane, morphing into a highly sculpted garden. atop the 25 to 45 meter tall volume, an observation platform along the south elevation directs views towards the skyline, Victoria Peak and encompassing landscape. The roofscape circulation will link to retail and nearby subway and public transit points. Voids and apertures within the facade bring daylight as well as visual glimpses down to the sub-grade platforms.

The have green walls inside the terminal, too. I wonder how many people will slog up those ramps, that look more like hills and must break every rule about maximum slope. But I do like the trend of roofs becoming public space.

More images at Aedas and designboom

At Coyote House, every day is an Earth Day | LA at Home [LA Times]

22 Sunday Apr 2012

Posted by Y2DC© in News

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architecture, Blackbird Architects, Environmental Design, green architecture, green design in LA, green materials, interior design, interior design consultants, LEED platinum homes, los angeles architecture, los angeles interior design

Oh, how far we’ve come from Earth Days past — when the phrase “green home” conjured images of straw-bale structures, when solar panels seemed like such an earnest novelty, when “LEED certified” hadn’t yet crept into public consciousness.

With Earth Day 2012 almost upon us, nearly 60,000 homes in the United States are in the process of being certified in the U.S. Green Building Council’s Leadership in Education and Environmental Design program, according to Nate Kredich, the organization’s vice president of residential market development. Need more convincing proof of just how far we’ve come? Take a peek at the new home of architect Ken Radtkey and landscape architect Susan Van Atta.

The husband and wife’s three-bedroom house nestled into a Montecito hillside is dubbed the Coyote House, partly after the name of the couple’s street, partly after the howling critters in the area. Beyond its abundance of energy- and water-saving features, however, the house is notable for its utter normality: On the most basic level, it is simply a comfortable and beautiful family home.

Coyote House veranda“Designing sustainably was a given for us,” says Radtkey, founder of Blackbird Architects, a Santa Barbara firm with an emphasis on sustainable design. “But the most important goal was to make a great home.”

To that end, the house starts with a modern take on the veranda, right. A covered room overlooking the front garden has a sliding screen and front and back sets of glass pocket doors that can open to the outdoors or seal it off in various ways, depending on the season and weather.

A dozen highly flammable eucalyptus trees — by coincidence, cut down just months before the November 2008 Tea fire that swept through the region — were used to build the front door, kitchen table, bookcases, stairs and banister. Other materials used for interior appointments were sustainable too: Cabinets are bamboo, the floors are cork or salvaged stone, most of the walls unpainted plaster.

Coyote House living room
But the house does go beyond common green materials and approaches, the couple says, “fully engaging the site to reap an experiential quality of life.” (That’s Van Atta and Radtkey in the living area.)On the “mirador” above a second-floor bedroom, for example, solar panels configured as a pergola not only generate nearly all of the house’s electricity but also create a shady viewing deck. “We like to go up and sit on our porch swing and have drinks there,” Radtkey says.Coyote House roofThe mirador looks out onto the second floor’s green roof, right, which Van Atta planted with sedum and dudleya. “Instead of looking out across a hot roof, we have a lovely green area to entertain friends,” she says. Combined with rooms that are partially bermed into the hillside, the green roof further merges the house into the landscape.The main green roof is arced, so rainwater gently flows down to a lower rooftop meadow atop the garage, and from there to a gutter feeding a sophisticated series of cisterns. About 10,000 gallons of rainwater can be stored to irrigate the terraced garden, vegetable beds, fruit trees and a large lawn where the couple’s two sons play.The water-wise lawn consists of native grass seeded into a 14-inch-deep pan of sand. When it needs watering, irrigation flows across the surface of the underground pan, reaching roots through a wicking effect and minimizing evaporation.Coyote House day
“Honestly, a lawn at a LEED platinum home may not make sense, but there’s a quality-of-life issue that you have to consider,” Radtkey says. “Our sons love volleyball and badminton, and we wanted a lawn for them to play on.”Coyote House chickensAlso on the playful side: five chickens in the side yard next to the kitchen. The cackling hens, pictured at right with the couple’s son, Kellen, have become family pets that eat leftovers, supply rich manure for the compost pile and produce fresh eggs daily. Near the bottom of the driveway, a new beehive will produce fresh honey for toast as well as pollinators for the orchard.“It’s a pleasure to go out and pick the eggs, then make omelets for breakfast,” Van Atta says. “Right now we get about one-fifth of our food from the new garden and chickens, but we expect much more as the garden and orchard mature.”

Much of what the family has done can be seen as simultaneously looking forward and back, Radtkey says.

“A lot of the old-fashioned elements are common sense and have been around forever, like green roofs, proper orientation of the house for shade, using trees from the site to build furnishings and interior woodwork — not to mention having your own vegetables, fruit, fresh eggs and honey,” he says. “We take advantage of the latest thinking and newest materials in order to realize values people have had forever.”

— Barbara Thornburg

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