
Last but not least, the bedrooms – made especially for the homeowner’s two grandchildren – are a “bed in a box” concept, each equipped with stereo sound and a flat-screen television. Warm in winter and cool in summer, the metal grating and the second-storey deck provide shade, and sweet relief from the hot summer sun. Adding to the cozy warmth, an electric mesh is installed into the lower floor to heat the house, along with a propane-burning stove for backup. Up close, however, modern design features and interior elements show it to be a clever adaptively reused silo house. The home’s southern exposure maximizes natural daylight and solar heat gain during the cold winter months. The first step in the process is to test the building by transforming the ground floor into a public exhibition gallery. The rounded shape provides amazing views in all directions as well as access to light year. The ultimate bachelor-pad-plus, this cozy residence is designed for a single man with additional space for his guests and grandchildren. But apart from aesthetics, this house boasts some other cool features – namely, its eco-friendly features. Up close, however, modern design features and interior elements show it to be a clever adaptively reused silo house. Nestled comfortably among nature and on the Provo River, this modern silo house was constructed of two linked corrugated-metal grain silos, giving the home its unique look and wonderful circular rooms inside. The Silo House At Laughing Llama Farm is a unique central Texas farm stay that is secluded and private, 20 minutes to everything Waco, Temple, Belton has to. Monte-Silo House was designed by Gigaplex Architects for a single man and his weekend visitors to Woodland, Utah.

The result is a combination modernist-by-comfortable-and-cozy interior design.Įxtra bedroom pods also conform to the curved spaces and continue the theme of cozy enclosure implied by the rest of the design.What a bachelor pad! This awesome 1,800-sq.-ft. Some of the metal from the silo is left exposed on the inside of the home and offset by the addition of warm wood and simple white paint. Building his own tiny home was a natural progression for Christoph who runs an architectural and interior design company, Kaiserworks, in Phoenix, Arizona. While this can be expensive the remark is visually dynamic – the surfaces and fixtures carry one’s eye continuously around any room. Of course, the beauty and bane of a circular house is that everything must be custom-designed to fit the curved interior spaces. Utilizing walnut plank flooring that Christoph also found on Craigslist, the interior conforms to the round exterior of the silo, rather than turning it into the square box-style rooms found in. Christoph Kaiser, an architect at Kaiserworks in Phoenix, Arizona, found a 1950’s grain silo on Craigslist and the creative juices began to flow. The rounded shape provides amazing views in all directions as well as access to light year round. The missile silo home is currently listed on the market for 750,000, which includes 19 acres of land. The thought process of this silo home began as a tiny house with an incredibly small footprint that would comfortably sustain his wife and himself. Leave it to an architect to come up with the idea of repurposing a 60-year-old grain silo into an exquisite piece of the amazing tiny home movement. H : Both you and Charlie Bass have storage silos for pellets at your homes. Designer Harry Heissmann enlisted Artgroove to create.

Here, he talks aboutyesthe magic of this new project (don’t miss the game of jacks on the walls) and what’s up next for him and his firm. Its exciting to see everything coming together. Recently, Heissmann designed a country home with family-first features at Silo Ridge, a members-only community in New York’s Hudson Valley. Take a peek at how construction is developing at the Silo House. The ultimate bachelor-pad-plus, this cozy residence is designed for a single man with additional space for his guests and grandchildren. SILO HOUSE - INTERIOR CONSTRUCTION UPDATE. Up close, however, modern design features and interior elements show it to be a clever adaptively reused silo house. Tucked away in the wilds of the rural American Midwest one might not suspect the nature of this home from a distance – it is, after all, easy to mistake for the two silos that were joined to create it.
