Maquoit Bay Residence by BRIBURN
A net-zero coastal farmhouse designed for long term durability, modern living, & old world charm.
A net-zero coastal farmhouse designed for long term durability, modern living, & old world charm.
The Lipno Lakeside Cabin was built on a place where an old wooden cabin used to be. It is designed to provide the perfect base for nearby mountain sports in all conditions.
The house at Portugal in a rural environment where the concrete and Riga wood inside create comfort and in the exterior the earth tone and vegetation give life to it.
The Antler House, built in The Springs of East Hampton in 1968, was perhaps his most whimsical. Over the years, new owners replaced original quirks with standard building features, and tacked on pragmatic additions.
Siding is the material used to surface the exterior of a building to protect it from elements like extreme weather, debris, and pests. Sidings also prevent heat loss while visually unifying the front of your property.
Shoehorned into the back of a beautiful Edwardian terraced property, the existing studio was entirely unloved and underwhelming. Every inch of wall was stained orange by cigarette smoke, the single glazing was falling out of its rotten frames and the whole place was uninsulated.
Unlike contemporary modern spaces that are cold and sterile, this house is modern and sleek yet roughhewn. With fine woodworking alongside the clean lines of the interior structure, raw and cooked come together in harmony.
Design is austere, compact, with only true natural colors. The aim is to move the atmosphere from messy bistro to decent tropical show kitchen.
The m.o.r.e. Cabin inverts this idea through a separation from the landscape that is much more sustainably constructed than other cottages.
Old Stream House is making reference to an old river bed, which now is a big and dense forest. This is where the volume is placed, an asymmetrical gabled house, containing a big living room, with the kitchen and dining room merged in the center.
“I was going to walk in the footsteps of my grandfather” – that was the motivation of the architect when he agreed to renovate this residence built by his grandfather, also an architect.
In a new coastal subdivision the Point Lonsdale house provides a sanctuary from the tough ocean winds. With potential retirement in mind for a couple with older children, this house is designed on a single level.