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The Color Drenching Room: 18 Ways to Go All-In on One Color (Without Losing Your Mind)

March 18, 2026 Tahira 0

Color drenching, painting walls, ceiling, trim, and sometimes even doors in a single color, is quickly becoming one of the defining interior design techniques of the moment. Instead of relying on contrast between walls and architectural details, this approach embraces total immersion in a single hue. The result can feel calm, dramatic, cocooning, or surprisingly . . .

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The Color Drenching Room: 18 Ways to Go All-In on One Color (Without Losing Your Mind)

March 18, 2026 Tahira 0

Color drenching, painting walls, ceiling, trim, and sometimes even doors in a single color, is quickly becoming one of the defining interior design techniques of the moment. Instead of relying on contrast between walls and architectural details, this approach embraces total immersion in a single hue. The result can feel calm, dramatic, cocooning, or surprisingly . . .

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white perforated cubic facade wraps hybrid home and studio around a tree in brazil

March 18, 2026 nebr 0

Casa Branca residence and studio unfolds within a single volume   Casa Branca by NEBR arquitetura is conceived as a combined residence and studio, developed from the intention to integrate living and working within a single spatial framework. The project is located in the Zona da Mata region of Pernambuco, a territory defined by a […]

The post white perforated cubic facade wraps hybrid home and studio around a tree in brazil appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

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Copper House / Fabrication Studio

March 18, 2026 Susanna Moreira 0

A compact garden suite in Toronto’s Sunnybrook Park area, Copper House is designed to allow an aging homeowner to remain in place while creating a second dwelling where her adult children can return independently.

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Form, Function, and Funding: The High-Tech Urbanism of San Francisco

March 18, 2026 Olivia Poston 0

San Francisco is a city that has always remade itself under pressure. Its Victorian streetscapes have survived seismic retrofits and glass towers, its neighborhoods defined as much by change as by its resistance to change. But no force in the city’s history has reshaped the built environment as completely, or as quickly, as the technology economy. What began in the postwar sprawl of Silicon Valley migrated north and inscribed its logic onto the skyline and the lives of residents. The result of this logic is an architectural culture of considerable technical refinement and refined material palettes, yet one that remains largely indifferent to the existing population.