Think about a resort, or how it feels to be in a really nice swimming pool in a really nice hotel. Why shouldn’t you live that way at home? Even though it’s hot and buggy here, people in Nashville entertain outdoors a lot. It seems everyone wants an outdoor living space now. That could look like one of many things—a front porch or a rooftop, a courtyard or a back patio, or all of the above. Architecturally these spaces can be very significant to the house, but they also contribute to resale value. Pretty recently Bynum Residential Design created a dramatic formal garden for a client with a fountain and a fireplace and a mirror and a chandelier and a swing bed; we’re excited to share those on our blog soon. In the meantime, I’m sharing some of my favorite ideas and thoughts for creating a haven around your own home. 1. Express yourself outdoors as well as in. Communicate your tastes with landscaping, just as you do with your interiors; an outdoor space can feel lonely and haunting, minimalist and chic, or hidden away but bursting with activity, like a secret garden. 2. Think dimensionally. A few years ago, I had an epiphany about outdoor living spaces that has since made creating them so much more fun. I realized that a backyard didn’t have to be just about walking out onto a flat terrace. It could be on levels and incorporate different materials. Not only are these spaces more wonderful while you’re walking around them, but they’re wonderful to view from above. 3. When and when not to err on the side of practicality. In Tennessee, the outdoors take a beating, and the sun is relentless, which means you have to use the right materials and know how to treat them so that they’ll last. For instance, if you use pressure-treated lumber on a deck surface or an arbor, it’s going to look like crap in no time. Instead, use cedar or something that will hold up over a longer period of time, and apply that same thinking to everything. And of course, when it comes to plantings, you can get yourself into a maintenance nightmare if you overdo it, so you have to just really love gardening—or you have to find a gardener. While there are some things that absolutely have to be taken seriously with regards to outdoor living—for instance, you have to be careful about where you place electrical, and fire pits and grills can’t be too close to a house or near an overhang—I also think the outdoor space is the perfect place to play. I’m one who likes lawn grass all the way up to the edge of the pool, and I don’t mind allowing vines to crawl across the entire side of a house. Sure, it may cause damage to siding or brick over time, but in my mind, the charm is worth it. It’s all about the vibe you want to create and how important that is to you. 4. Take inspiration from enormous spaces. In Paris all the trees along the Champs Elysees are pruned into squares. There are hundreds and thousands of them, and they look like big ice cubes. They're stunning. I’m also a huge fan of elaborate hedge mazes. What fun is a maze! It’s elegant and formal. Just because you have a tiny urban backyard does not mean you can’t incorporate grandiose elements from your favorite parks and public spaces. One of my favorite things to do is to cloud prune boxwoods to create big, round, poufy shrubs that add a sculptural touch. And even if you just create a short boxwood maze for kids that you can look down on from an upstairs space, you’ve added so much whimsy and grace. 5. Add shape and texture. Another thing I’m crazy about: topiaries and shapes of all kind in a yard. Beyond plants, I like using concrete balls or squares of concrete to create a Flintstones-inspired floor. For pathways, I prefer a really fine crushed gravel because it’s such a pretty juxtaposition to a manicured lawn or a concrete walk. Plus it adds texture, and it’s always more fun to have different textures and materials and make them relate to one another. 6. Beyond plants, add favorite objects. I love to add old, old elements to a landscape—concrete urns and finials, for instance. A rusty bench. I also love curtains in outdoor spaces. It's just amazing how you can define a space with objects like these. 7. My favorite plants. I’m funny about plants. I love boxwoods and arborvitaes and hydrangeas, and that’s just about it. Those are my go-tos. A lot of people here use ornamental grasses, but I feel like those don’t really belong in our part of the country. The coolest thing to me about planting is using a combination of deciduous (lose their leaves) and non-deciduous (don’t lose their leaves) shrubs. I like to use them all because some have a wild appearance and some you can shape, as I like to do with those perfectly round boxwood balls in the wintertime. It’s amazing to see the juxtaposition of those formal elements covered in snow next to something that’s twiggy and missing all of its foliage.
8. Embrace Mother Nature’s hand in the design. When choosing what to plant, think about shadows and mist and fallen snow and how the feel and function of your outdoor oasis will change through the seasons. In all seasons the yards with both deciduous and non-deciduous shrubs are the prettiest, as there’s nothing like a snowfall or a hard frost on all those plants. Oh, it’s just magic. For more outdoor living inspiration, see Bynum Design's Outdoor Living Pinterest board.
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When, a few years ago, we kept coming across garage doors inside hotels during our travels--and, locally, inside restaurants, we got to dreaming about installing a garage door in an unconventional way—in a residential interior space. We were very excited to have a client who shared our enthusiasm for the idea, and have since found many, many more clients in Nashville who specify a roll-up, glass-paned garage door be used in their home, serving as a bridge between the indoors and out. In fact, using garage doors in this way has become one of Bynum Design’s trademarks. We most often install them to open from living spaces onto patios, decks, or pools. As for the pros and cons of an interior garage door, we sometimes find they are one and the same; that's why, when determining whether or not a garage door is a good fit for you, it’s worthwhile to consider how it fits with your taste, your lifestyle, and your priorities. Here are some of our thoughts on interior garage doors, with the pros and cons all mixed in together: You’ll let gobs of light in. Hello, beautiful sunlight every single day. Even when your garage door is closed, you can enjoy all the light that it allows to pour in. And a garage door can prove to be the perfect vantage point from which to watch a sunrise, sunset, thunderstorm, or snow shower. Window coverings are a challenge. When it comes to window coverings, you're certain to run into all kinds of problems accommodating a garage door. You can’t hang draperies in front of them; instead you have to rig something else—a roller shade could work. Nevertheless, protecting privacy can prove to be challenging. The power button isn’t pretty. Most of these garage doors come with a gigantic power button and some other bulky metal mechanisms that can’t really be prettied-up. Homeowners have to live with—and preferably dig—the industrial vibe this contributes to. Many of our spaces are a cross between industrial and farmhouse and modern, so it works fine. A wooden garage door would probably be better suited for a traditional home. Your utility bill may not be pretty either. Obviously, having a garage door open to the outside doesn’t exactly promote energy efficiency. So if you’re going to roll your door up when you have company over, you pretty much have to make up your mind to just enjoy the juxtaposition between hot outside and cool inside; I like to think it’s kind of like being at the ocean, when you get both hot and cold currents. You may choose to install blower fans to keep hot air out of the home—I’ve seen that done at restaurants—but they’re loud. We recommend installing insulated doors to eliminate drafts during colder months when your door is kept shut. You can temporarily "take a wall down." There’s no other way I’ve found to visually—and literally—open up a space so quickly and so dramatically. Safety may be a concern with children. For homeowners with children, we’ve had some concern about how safe these doors may be. They come with backstops, but that doesn’t always assuage the worry satisfactorily. One of our clients ultimately decided to remove the garage door from her home and install French doors instead so she wouldn’t have to worry about her young son being near it. Expense and construction concerns: Creating a nontraditional opening can mean added expense, especially in an existing home. Writing this into the plans for a new home, right from the get-go, may mitigate this. We’ve also run into some engineering/constructional concerns, as extra space is required for clearance where the door needs to align with the ceiling when opened. In other words, expect that your request for an interior garage door may present your contractor with some problems that may require creative thinking to solve. Add value to your home: A garage door is such a chic and desirable feature inside modern homes that adding one to your house is almost certain to boost your home’s value and increase its curb appeal. Do you see any other pros or cons inherent to this trend? Tell us in the comments.
If you know anything about Bynum Design you know that we find farmhouses spellbinding. Farmhouse style tends to wind its way into just about every Nashville space we design and style. Whether you're building a house from scratch or are looking to incorporate farmhouse style into your existing home, there are plenty of foolproof ways to give life to the casual, homespun look that makes farmhouses so enchanting. What's to love about a farmhouse? Farmhouses were built to be durable and to hold a noisy, field-dirty gang of family and friends. They're unpretentious and soulful. Reinterpreted today, the urban farmhouse represents a simpler time and serves as a retreat from the hectic world right outside the front door. I think that's why we see so many people romanticizing farmhouses now; a farmhouse represents a desire for an easier way of life. But also--because a farmhouse once served as the dominant structure in a cluster of buildings--it has a naturally commanding presence. Even when they're simple or minimalist, they're somehow dramatic. And with their open floorplans people envision them as great, light-filled gathering places for big family meals and happy holidays and parties. This is true of most homes, but especially in a farmhouse: the kitchen should really be designed to be the heart of the home. What color should the exterior of a farmhouse be painted? Almost everyone wants them to be white, though there a couple on my Pinterest page that are matte black; even unadorned, they are so stately. Other telltale exterior farmhouse elements: It's best to use casual, straightforward materials like lap siding, shake shingles, and stone. Stick to simple, classic forms and clean Shaker lines--and err toward an exterior that is not overly decorated. We get requests fairly often to do wraparound porches and metal roofs on our farmhouse-inspired structures. Likewise, metal plays into a farmhouse's exterior with galvanized metal gutters, downspouts, and barn-inspired light fixtures. Otherwise, I like leaving the rafters of porch ceilings exposed so that you can really see the structure; that’s an honest approach to the materials. Rocking chairs, of course, belong on a farmhouse porch. Interior paint colors for a farmhouse: It's best to keep a farmhouse light and bright. Sometimes we even do multiple shades of white within the same project. It gives it more of that shabby chic look because you’ll see creams and beiges and linens and taupes and whites and grays all in one space. Exterior colors are so much harder to select. For our exteriors we buy quarts of things and put it up in blocks and have a good long look at it before we decide. To date we really haven’t done a lot of different whites on the exterior. We just have a couple that we really like. I’m kind of fond of the idea of doing a dirty white--almost an ivory--for our next farmhouse. Design and decorative elements befitting a farmhouse: Just like with the porch ceilings, I like leaving interior ceiling beams exposed so you can really see the guts of the place. If the ceilings are vaulted, it will further add to a sense of effortless interior drama. As far as decor, farmhouses can go anywhere from country-kitchen-with-butter-churns to minimalist to industrial with some unexpected glam thrown in. We like to decorate them a little kitschy with hay bale forks and tractor grilles turned into lamps. Interior barn doors are common elements, as are wooden farm tables, farmhouse or apron-front sinks, four-poster beds, clawfoot tubs, earthy textiles like woven rugs, and sturdy, casual cotton fabrics. As with anyplace great, the details are important--mason jars, fresh flowers, and galvanized metal fixtures are farmhouse favorites. Ideally, everything will be washed with lots of glorious natural light. A word about wood: Warm wood tones--or painted white wood--should come into play in every farmhouse. If real wood walls are affordable to you, that's preferred, even if you just do one wood wall--flanking a fireplace, for instance, or going up a staircase. On our spec homes we unfortunately don’t do anything with reclaimed wood because it’s so expensive. Instead we use lesser expensive materials and then finish them in a way that makes them look like they’re old reclaimed wood. The farmhouse of my dreams would make generous use of shiplap paneling. Do you dream of a farmhouse?
For more farmhouse inspiration, follow my Farmhouses board on Pinterest. |
Dee BynumDee Bynum has his finger on the pulse. Whether it’s following trends, scouting emerging neighborhoods and infill opportunities, or overseeing the development of a design, Dee’s dedication to—or obsession with—his projects is renowned. Categories
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