Before us is a modern country house harmoniously integrated into an autumn forest landscape. The architectural composition represents an interesting combination of geometric volumes — a strict two-story main building with a flat roof and an adjoining single-story wing with a traditional pitched roof.
The facade is designed in a minimalist style with clear influences from modernism and Frank Lloyd Wright's school of architecture. White plastered walls contrast with wooden brown elements — window frames and decorative details. A vertical accent is created by a tall chimney that visually divides the building's volume. The panoramic glazing on the upper floor and in the single-story section creates a sense of connection between the interior and the surrounding nature.
Particularly noteworthy is the arrangement of corner windows with characteristic horizontal divisions, which is a distinctive feature of organic architecture. The architect skillfully utilized the interpenetration of external and internal spaces — a small terrace with garden furniture and well-thought-out landscape design with flowering plants emphasize this principle.
In designing your own home facade, you can draw upon techniques such as combining materials of different textures and colors (light plaster and dark wood), horizontal lines of window frames that create a visual connection with the landscape, and the use of protruding architectural elements to create plays of light and shadow. Another important technique is the organization of transitional spaces between the house and garden — porches, terraces, and canopies that blur the clear boundary between architecture and nature.