Beautiful Living Rooms Modernist or Traditional Design
January 30, 2012
The luxurious decor and simple measure is actually functioning as an homage to the cosmopolitan context of this room a live. A contemporary space traditional benefits of interior architecture is discussed thoroughly, from floor to ceiling, and highlights and lightened by natural lighting. In Gasperi using natural materials and lighting to soften the effect of decoration space.


An invaluable work which is built and designed that were created from the interior architecture, dense texture, and natural colors give warmth to the living room traditional contemporary

n Gasperi using natural materials and lighting to soften the effect of decoration space. Rectilinear otherwise slim and elegant with earthy tones simplify this living room, while natural sunlight gives buoyancy otherwise neutral tones. Color Juxtapositional grant large dimensions in plan while the airiness abundant space to provide levity. Art Moderne large space with a contrasting color scheme has a strong dimension.

Beautiful Design Interior Home Theater
April 16, 2011
This Interior Beautiful design present with luxurious architecture,
decoration interior and furniture design.very new beautiful home theater and modern interior living room design.

This is gread ideas to make new home with home theater,
LCD TV or plasma Tv in your living room.

Interior Restaurant Design in Manhattan
April 14, 2011
Interior Restaurant Design in Manhattan by Andre Kikoski The design solution references the building’s architecture without repeating it, and in the process transforming familiar geometries, spatial effects and material qualities.

The design brings to life a play between these sculptural elements and the architecturally-layered, illuminated materials that invite participation and a sense of delight for all patrons.The playfulness of forms and the dynamics of movement through this 1,600 square foot space imbue the design with novelty, subtlety and intrigue, in part through the material palette of the space.



The wall behind the Corian bar is lined in fiber-optic wood; the metal bar front has a textured patina; and mesh stretched behind the blue leather banquettes is patterned with a tiny version of Wright’s “primitive initial,” the football-like shape of the rotunda’s columns and fountain, which formed the basis for Kikoski’s floor plan. Wright, whose many utopian fantasies were on view in the Guggenheim’s recent 50th anniversary retrospective, was never shy about embracing the future. It’s nice to see the museum thinks along the same lines.

Too High TeaHouse In Japan
March 4, 2011
Created in 2004 by Terunobu Fujimori, a professor of architecture at the University of Tokyo, is building his dream as a child and built on his father’s garden. Her father said when he saw his son’s work: Again again twisted out Terunobu

The Tea House. , this house is also commonly called Takasugi-an Teahouse, which means “a tea house [built] too high.”


This one architect, Fujimori

The following teaching in the interior, just given a bamboo rug.

Wozoco Apartments Design
March 2, 2011
This is a truly unique work idea, wise and yet fun, intelligent and lively. It is a three-dimensional colour palette that redeems the greyness of the suburbs.
Commissioned by the Het Oosten Housing Association,The pull of gravity on granny and grandpa is heavy enough as it is. People of their age just want a place that offers as much peace as possible. What the authorities should do is turn this building over to those whose lives would make better sense of its best architecture design: the spirited youth.

WoZoCo’s bizarre, truly surprising profile is in actual fact a result of one of the first hurdles encountered in the project: Cornelis Van Eesteren’s urban development plan – dating back to the late ’20s – set a limit of 87 apartments per block to ensure that each one of them would be adequately lit.

To hang thirteen of the 100 units off the north facade of the block. The ingenious best design saves ground floor space and allows enough sunlight to enter the east or west facade.




