A modern home was recently built on California's ocean coast and offers beautiful views of San Francisco Bay. The house is actually located between the forest and the ocean and the homeowners can get the best of both. Walker Warner Architects dealt with the draft and design. There is a timeless yet modern design inside and outside. Noble materials and surfaces can be found in both room and garden design. The designers relied on neutral nuances, natural stone and wood inside and out and created a harmonious atmosphere in every area of the beautiful property.
You enter the designer house through a large door in bright red. The daring color suggests that things will be really exciting inside the house. The entrance to the house is actually in the middle of the house and an internal staircase leads to the lower and upper living levels. The area is designed entirely in natural stone. Downstairs you reach the living and dining room, which remains hidden behind a decorative structural wall. From there you can go outside and enjoy the beautiful sea views from the terrace. On the upper floor there is a second living room, which is also where the family sleeps.
The adjacent garden surrounds the building on two sides and offers beautiful views of the ocean from one side and the forest from the other. The outdoor area has a very modern design and is divided into extremely functional areas so that the homeowners can make optimal use of the property. There is a large pool with lawn, a lounge with a fire pit and an outdoor dining area with a roof. Enable a smooth transition from the living room to the gardenfloor-to-ceiling patio doors, which can be moved in no time. By using natural stone and wood inside and out, the designers have combined the two areas creatively and also created an elegant, cozy atmosphere.
For the interior and exterior design, the designers chose Aegean limestone and western red cedar.The two materialscan be discovered in every room, including the garden, and are complemented by various elegant surfaces and fabrics.
*a project byWalker Warner Architects