Family Home / Tag

Capriccio House by Vitor Dias Arquitetura

Capriccio House by Vitor Dias Arquitetura

Capriccio House is a three-story family house in Louveira, Brazil, designed by Vitor Dias Arquitetura with a gently sloped roof anchoring its street presence. Inside, open-plan social levels flow toward a pool terrace and a wide forest view, shaping a contemporary home for a young family that loves to gather. Wood ceilings, Minas stone surfaces, and generous glazing lend warmth and clarity to the daily rhythm of this hillside residence.

Casa Granata by Labia Design

Casa Granata by Labia Design

Casa Granata sets a refined domestic scene in Frattamaggiore, Italy, where Labia Design reshapes an apartment into a calm yet animated sequence of rooms. Soft neutrals, pale wood, and tailored furnishings frame family life while broad glazing draws in daylight from the terrace. Each room holds a distinct mood, from the sociable living core to the characterful children’s quarters, giving the project a warm, contemporary Italian rhythm.

Villa Kronbuhl by Oppenheim Architecture

FeaturedVilla Kronbuhl by Oppenheim Architecture

Villa Kronbuhl stands on the shore of Lake Constance in Germany, where Oppenheim Architecture shapes a house around far-reaching views and daily rituals. The 3,700-square-foot home pivots level by level to catch mountains, forest, and water, giving an international family a flexible retreat that shifts between quiet living and generous gathering. Inside and out, each turn of the plan pulls life back toward the landscape.

Garden Coverage Turns 1980s Penthouse Into Layered Family Home

Garden Coverage Turns 1980s Penthouse Into Layered Family Home

Garden Coverage unfolds across a 580m² penthouse apartment in São Paulo, Brazil, where Diego Revollo Arquitetura responds to a robust 1980s structure with vivid interiors. The project sits in the Jardins neighborhood and reshapes a recently renovated, Mediterranean-style building into a layered home for a young couple and their children. Color, material, and furniture placement carry most of the work, turning a neutral renovation into a residence with clear family rhythms.

Casa MK: A Social House Crafted For Music, Parties and Life

FeaturedCasa MK: A Social House Crafted For Music, Parties and Life

Casa MK unfolds as a lively family house in São Paulo, Brazil, where social rituals anchor every room. SuperLimão Studio builds on a long-standing collaboration with the clients to turn a former renovation brief into a full reimagining of how they live, gather, and play. The result is a home shaped around music, reuse, and everyday celebration rather than static formality.

Day House by IF Architecture

Day House by IF Architecture

Day House sets a Victorian home in Malvern, Melbourne, Australia into a new rhythm for contemporary living. IF Architecture reworks the historic residence and later addition into a layered family house that pairs restored character with a composed modern palette. Across garden-facing rooms, poolside terraces, and reconfigured interiors, the project builds a calm sequence where period detail, crafted joinery, and considered material shifts give each room its own clear mood.

Concrete Harmony House Balances Cool Minimalism With Vivid Comfort

FeaturedConcrete Harmony House Balances Cool Minimalism With Vivid Comfort

Concrete Harmony House sets a calm yet expressive tone in Shilat, Israel, where Narkis Rubin Barazani shapes a contemporary family house around light and color. Large panes slide open to a shaded terrace while concrete, deep blues, and warm timber ground the interiors. Each room reads as part of a single narrative, from the crisp black kitchen to the gentle children’s rooms and the quietly composed main bedroom suite.

Phan Rang House – Hidden yard: Concrete Refuge For Coastal Heat Living

Phan Rang House – Hidden yard: Concrete Refuge For Coastal Heat Living

Phan Rang House – Hidden yard stands in Phan Rang–Tháp Chàm, Vietnam, where Plus Idea Studio tackles dense city fabric and a harsh coastal climate with quiet clarity. This private house for a young family turns heat, wind, and noise into design drivers, using raw concrete, shaded voids, and layered thresholds to shape daily life. Inside, open volumes and sliding partitions keep the home adaptable as the children grow and routines shift.

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