Posted by: B&P
on Oct 11, 2010
Tagged in:
Transforming a room ,
stone hearth ,
room remodeling ,
room design ,
renovations mclean ,
renovations bethesda ,
remodeling mclean ,
remodeling bethesda ,
overhead ceiling lights ,
Md ,
house remodeling ,
house ,
Home Remodeling ,
French doors ,
French doors ,
fireplace ,
dining room remodeling ,
designs ,
brenneman & pagenstecher ,
Bethesda

This home in Bethesda, MD had been remodeled several different times with different designs. Our goal was to unify and give cohesion to the house without making major changes. In this room we started with simply changing the pattern of the window divisions. We then moved the door to the center and replaced it with French doors. Overhead ceiling lights were added to brighten the room and we retrimmed the fireplace with a custom designed mantel and stone hearth.
We believe in a team approach; and working enthusiastically, hand in hand with our clients is very important to us. Nothing is more satisfying than standing back with our clients, reviewing a completed project and saying, "look at what we've created together".
Brenneman & Pagenstecher
301-933-9305
www.brenpag.com
Posted by: B&P
on Oct 7, 2010
Tagged in:
XDining Rooms in chevy chae ,
XDining Rooms in Bethesda ,
Unique Solutions ,
Unique Homes ,
Unique Clients ,
remodeling chevy chase ,
remodeling bethesda ,
mid-century rambler ,
Dining Rooms in Bethesda ,
designers chevy chase ,
Designers bethesda ,
classically-inspired treatment ,
Built-ins chevy chase ,
Built-ins bethesda ,
Built-ins ,
build chevy chase ,
build bethesda
As an Architect who remodels older homes, I constantly adjust my design approach; to serve the differing circumstances created by the wide range of styles found in the Washington DC area. Here are two very different architectural solutions for dining room storage and display, in two very different homes -- both in Bethesda, MD:

The first home received a formal, classically-inspired treatment, with storage cabinets and display shelves recessed into the wall. Notice that the third bay of the built-in is actually the door to the kitchen! The door panels are recessed into the vertical dividers of the cabinetry, creating a "paneled portal" effect. Additional storage and serving surface are provided by a lovely breakfront.

The second home is a mid-century rambler, in which we replaced a single window with a group of 4 windows and a pair of skylights, framed by built-ins. This is how we resolved the conflicting need for more light with the need to furnish along that same wall. Notice the floating shelf separating the upper and lower windows; it provides serving and display surfaces, but it also allows us to treat the windows in entirely different ways. The upper windows are trimmed-out and subdivided into 4 panes, reinforcing the traditional notion of what a window should be, while the lower windows seem to disappear in to the adjacent woodwork and serve as a place to display sculpture. The lighted display cases in the surrounding built-ins serve to anchor the entire composition.
Every home and every client are different. So my simple formula for pleasing architectural designs is this: Unique Homes + Unique Clients = Unique Solutions.
Brenneman & Pagenstecher
301-933-9305