New Century Modern Residence by HMH Architecture + Interiors
This incredible home located in Boulder foothills was designed by Cherie Goff of HMH Architecture + Interiors for a couple that had recently moved to Colorado from San Francisco.
This incredible home located in Boulder foothills was designed by Cherie Goff of HMH Architecture + Interiors for a couple that had recently moved to Colorado from San Francisco.
Located on the edge of Sloan’s Lake with panoramic views of the Rocky Mountains, this house is designed for healthy living, entertaining and artfulness.
The main influence in the design is the essence of simplicity, its composition, and purity of form. While the home has a definite geometric elegance, there is a hidden playfulness found within.
The goal for this single family residence was to create a simple, compact live-work home in the mountains that fully embraces living in nature while also addressing the social and environmental challenges of living in the mountains.
Part of a family compound, the home is positioned at the edge of a meadow, amid existing evergreens, spruce and gambel oak trees.
Blur House, by day, is a silhouette, a dark floating bar, a metallic cloak wrapped around a bright, light-filled home. The homeowners are two art consultants who experience the house’s juxtaposing nature when crossing the threshold between interior and exterior.
The Foothills Residence is filled with warm, comfortable materials and personal touches. Every surface, art piece, and furnishing was carefully considered.
Located on a 5 acre site in south Boulder, this project illustrates the transformative nature of remodeling a dated older home into a contemporary dwelling.
To strengthen the family through design we needed to create a retreat that fosters and accentuates community and interaction, facilitates multi-generational family gathering, and supports aging in place.
The house itself is a simple composition; a square base, clad with precision in a random pattern that recalls the new England stonework of Marcel Breuer and supports a rotated “L” -shaped second story clad in blackened steel.
Mariposa Garden House is built on top of an existing, 1940’s concrete foundation. The reuse of this foundation was seen not as a constraint, but as an opportunity.
Set along a ridgeline amidst dramatic mountain views, 8,259 square foot Ridge House thoughtfully blends the old and new through the renovation of an existing 1960s structure.