With handcrafted interiors inspired by traditional Japanese houses, art director Vivia Horn's upstate retreat is all about Eastern influence. "I call it Beauty and the Beast," says Vivia Horn of her vacation home in New York's Catskill Mountains. On the outside, the house, if not quite beastly.
Take advantage of a rare invitation to step inside one of Brooklyn's most famous, yet exclusive homes, the Japanese House in Flatbush! 2. Rustic Japanese Home in Lake Georgia, NY Located near the picturesque mountain range near Lake Georgia, this home combines country style with intricate Japanese home design.
This 1,650-sq.ft. property has two bathrooms, two bedrooms, and a tailor. The Japanese-Style House of Prospect Park South This unique house, the only one of its kind in Brooklyn, was built as part of a real estate developer's showcase.
Brooklyn, New York. 131 Buckingham Road is widely cited as New York City's most unusual residence - a century-old Japanese-style wood-frame home, in the heart of Victorian Flatbush. In the words of the NYC Landmarks Preservation Commission, "The most exotic and certainly the best-known house in Prospect Park South is this Japanese style wood and stucco structure designed in 1902 by Petit & Green for Dean.
The Daiku House in Berne, New York is a custom-crafted two-bedroom home on seven secluded acres that thoughtfully incorporates Japanese-inspired style and design. Built in 1982 by the home's current and original owner who studied carpentry in Japan ("Daiku" translates to "carpenter" in Japanese), the two. The Japanese style house at 131 Buckingham Rd.
was built from 1902 to 1903. Architects Petit & Greene designed the Japanese style house for the speculative developer Dean Alford, who had purchased 50 acres in 1899 to create an upper-class suburban enclave, Prospect Park South. This house was the only one of its kind in the development of Victorian single-family homes, and, while it.
This home, designed according to traditional Japanese style, sits on nearly 3 acres of land about 30 minutes from New York City. Little Minka. A serene Japanese folk house nestled on 10 acres of private woodland and streams.
Embracing the Wabi-Sabi, Little Minka is unique, handcrafted using Japanese traditional carpentry joinery methods. Soaring ceilings, shoji, and tatami complete the interior. Outside there's a fire pit, open cooking area.
Explore this home in Park Avenue, New York filled with Japanese woodblock prints and a cherry blossom grove, reflecting a couple's dynamic style evolution through the years In the heart of Manhattan, space is a precious commodity. But an eclectic pied-à.