Residential Architecture

In the Architecture category, HomeWorldDesign presents you beautiful and modern houses, amazing buildings and stunning architecture structures born from the creativity and imagination of the best architects and designers in the world. The eye can enjoy a virtual tour of the most attractive homes in the world of indoor and outdoor presentations, of some of the most amazing residential projects and more. Expect to see the presentation of architectural projects of all cultures and tastes. Simple viewing of works by ingenious architects and designers can help you to transform your room or house into a dream home.

Bucktown House by Blender Architecture 4

Bucktown House by Blender Architecture

Bucktown house is a single-family home recently completed by Blender Architecture, an architecture practice based in Chicago. “Located on a double lot and a neighboring empty lot to the south, we took advantage of the natural daylight for a garden and patio space.

Brooklyn house, New York, United States

11 Foot Wide Brooklyn House Extended and Upgraded by Office of Architecture

The owners of this 11 foot wide row Brooklyn house were faced with a conundrum that many young families in New York eventually confront: the possibility of sacrificing location for space. After living in the house for eight years, the pair – architect/Yale critic Aniket Shahane and jewelry designer Blanca Monros Gomez

Jeju House by Moon Hoon 15

Jeju House by Moon Hoon / South Korea

The secretive life-style of the client is presumed and imagined by the architect. Thus the bunker like home trenched into the earth, with an atrium in the middle was the first plan. The horizontal slit like villa savoye cut the home in half, one submerged, the other floating.

This House Provides a Meditative Retreat with Expansive Views of the East China Sea

Meditative Retreat with Expansive Views of the East China Sea

Perched on the edge of a cliff on Japan’s remote Ikema Island, this house provides a meditative retreat with expansive views of the East China Sea. Built of concrete to withstand extreme weather, the architects detailed the home with traditional Japanese materials to soften its edges.

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