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Sunday, November 29, 2009

A Fresh Start

    A Fresh Start


    Artistic vision comes naturally to architect and designer Ernesto Santalla. Those creative insights became particularly useful back in 2006, when he first glimpsed the plain, one-bedroom apartment in Northwest DC that he would ultimately buy. “I liked its quiet, park-like setting,” Santalla recalls. “It presented a clean palette to work on. I could see beyond it to how it could be changed to reflect my lifestyle.”
    livingroom interior design, interior solutions, amazing homestyle, best furnitures, A frosted-glass wall screens the bathroom from the living room area, which includes an expansive sofa from Donghia, and a glass-topped coffee table.
    A frosted-glass wall screens the bathroom from the living room area, which includes an expansive sofa from Donghia, and a glass-topped coffee table.

    Luxury home, apartment accent, new design homestyle,A vivid accent wall provides the perfect backdrop for a custom-designed credenza, vases from Kose and a series of paintings in mixed media by John Dickson.
    A vivid accent wall provides the perfect backdrop for a custom-designed credenza, vases from Kose and a series of paintings in mixed media by John Dickson.

    Built in 1959, the high-rise apartment building once provided student housing for American University; though Santalla’s unit was updated in the early 2000s, the floor plan remained the same. Santalla describes the building’s architecture as “International style,” a modernist aesthetic that developed in the 1920s characterized by simplified lines, a lack of ornamentation and the use of glass and steel. Santalla chose to embrace the architectural roots of the building by adhering to these characteristics even while radically altering the look of the space.
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    The L-shaped living room/dining room.

    The 900-square-foot apartment includes a living/dining room with an adjoining kitchen, master bedroom and bath. In order to add visual interest and continuity, Santalla used the same dark-taupe paint and walnut millwork, interspersed with a warm white, on selected walls throughout the residence. In the living room, he painted an accent wall a vivid orange-red, and he stained all the apartment’s light oak floors a dark espresso color. In a corner of the dining area, he covered the space between windows with mirrored panels to create the effect of windows going all the way around, a characteristic of the International style. He also installed a mirror at the end of the bank of windows on one wall to create what he calls “the architectural trompe l’oeil effect of extending the windows even further.” Santalla placed a prized sculpture by Washington artist John Dreyfuss in front of the mirror so, as he says, “I can see it from both sides.”
     kitchen cabinets, kitchen, hells kitchen, kitchen design, kitchen remodel, kitchen islands, kitchen aid, kitchen faucets,Santalla enclosed the kitchen and removed the upper cabinets to make the small space feel less crowded.

    Santalla enclosed the kitchen and removed the upper cabinets to make the small space feel less crowded.



    The greatest alteration to the apartment, however, occurred in the bathroom and walk-in closet. Originally, the space was piecemeal, dark and cramped. Santalla demolished the walls to create one room; by utilizing part of the front hall closet and reapportioning the area, he was able to construct a spacious combination master bath and dressing room. He replaced the wall between the bathroom and living room with frosted glass, which brings light in from the rest of the apartment but allows for privacy. Creamy limestone used on the floors, walls, shower surround and eight-inch-thick countertops lends the room a sleek continuity.

    There was one design conundrum. The only entrance to the bedroom is through the bath, a setup that Santalla found unappealing. “I placed drapes across the shower and toilet so that it feels like you’re entering a foyer,” he explains, adding that he often uses drapes for concealment. The designer also removed the door between the bedroom and bath—but left the doorway—to add a sense of flow between the spaces.

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    The bathroom.

    Santalla carried the taupe color scheme and walnut millwork into the bedroom, where he painted two opposing walls and the ceiling to provide a unifying element to the room. Taupe draperies cover the bedroom closet doors and the windows opposite. Below the windows, walnut millwork conceals air conditioning ducts.

    In the main living area, Santalla played with the idea of solid and voided space by enclosing the kitchen completely in walnut yet leaving the adjacent dining area open. He removed the upper cabinetry in the kitchen to make it feel more airy despite its enclosure, and painted it dark taupe. In the dining area, he dropped the ceiling and painted it the color of the kitchen, delineating the space yet leaving it open to the living room.
    Bedroom interior design, new bedroom vision, best bedroom furnitures, best solutions, On the wall in the bedroom, Santalla displays a ceramic piece by Margaret Boozer and work by local artist Andrés Tremols.


    On the wall in the bedroom, Santalla displays a ceramic piece by Margaret Boozer and work by local artist Andrés Tremols.

    Santalla’s decorative vision also encompassed furnishings of his own design, including a dining table, credenza and desk on which high-gloss, white-lacquered surfaces rise over a rich African hardwood called Mozambique. “The idea behind the furniture is that it appears to float,” Santalla says of his pieces. In the living room area, comfortable chairs and a sofa by Donghia are grouped around a glass-topped coffee table with a chrome-plated steel base. A plush white wool carpet offers a strong contrast to the nearly black-stained floors. Original fluorescent lights have been replaced throughout with recessed and accent lighting. Against a backdrop of chromatic wall surfaces, an eclectic collection of modern art shows to great effect. Works by Andrés Tremols, sculptor Margaret Boozer, painter Kevin Tillman and others add the finishing touches to Ernesto Santalla’s own expertly rendered palette.

http://modern-house-interior-decor.blogspot.com

LIVINGROOM HOME STYLE

    Going Glam

    While studying interior design in Boston, William Powell had a eureka moment. One of his instructors, a well-known designer, invited him for a drink after class. “She was one of those people you can never really read,” he recalls. “Professionally, you never knew if she loved you or hated you. I thought she was going to tell me to give it up.”
    Custom furnishings upholstered in velvet, silk Robert Allen sheers and a Murano glass-beaded ceiling create a luxurious environment in the formal living room.

    LIVINGROOM HOME STYLE

    They sat down and she asked him, point-blank, “What do you think you’re doing” Powell nearly fell off his stool. “Studying interior design, I think,” he replied. “This is not for you in terms of training,” she said. “I have to tell you quite honestly: You already have the eye. You have the skill. You need to be out in the field working with clients. Just go for it.”
    luxury interior design  Versace vases on pedestals and a hand-knotted wool rug lead guests into the revamped interior.

    VERSACE INTERIOR DESIGN

    Powell left the university and never looked back. “I really appreciate her to this day because I would have gone through the program,” he says. “She told me it might have been detrimental for me to study because some of the disciplines they’d teach me would probably be in conflict with my style and what I was already doing.”
    best luxury homestyle, interior design solutions, art decoration, A black-glass credenza and illuminated museum shelving display collections of crystal and fine china.

    LUXURY MODERN HOME STYLE

    Born and raised in Los Angeles, Powell launched his career at Cartier, where he worked in human resources and executive administration. He and his partner, Richard Johnson, moved to Boston in 2002, when Johnson landed a position as chief financial officer for the Boston Ballet. In Boston, Powell enrolled in a few classes and began taking on interior design projects. He also completely overhauled the townhouse he shared with Johnson. Designed in a traditional, tailored style, the home was published in a national magazine.
    livinroom interior accent, art decoration, moern dasigner tabel,A cocktail table from Theodore’s.

    A COCKTAIL TABLE FROM THEODORE'S

    Powell shifted his practice to the DC area in 2004, when Johnson accepted a post as COO/CFO of the Washington National Opera. Powell also immersed himself in the renovation of the condominium apartment he and Johnson eventually purchased in Arlington. His ambitious plan would replace the condo’s new but standard-grade appointments with completely customized fixtures and finishes.

    amazing interior design, best furnitures, interior solutions, Dining chairs are upholstered in Brunschwig & Fils velvet.
    Dining chairs are upholstered in Brunschwig & Fils velvet.


    The apartment greets guests with a heady mix of glamour and restraint. Gone are the original bare white walls, “orangy” oak floors and run-of-the-mill lighting. “It wasn’t the caliber of build that we thought we were getting,” explains Powell. “So I came in and I went backwards.” Before even addressing color schemes and furniture selections, Powell focused on basic infrastructure. “I replaced, literally, all of the hardware, flooring and carpet and all of the doors which are now solid core as opposed to hollow,” he says, “plus all the electrical.” He also installed new appliances and countertops in the kitchen and new vanities, fixtures and top-of-the-line tile in the bathrooms.
    TV room, place for relax, apartment design, modern interior solutions,  A black-granite carpet surround and custom pillows embellish the media room.

    A black-granite carpet surround and custom pillows embellish the media room.

    From its gleaming marble floors to its enlarged crown molding, the finished apartment is a far cry from the original. “It is kind of my own little jewel box,” says Powell, reflecting back to his days at Cartier. Hints of sparkle in the chrome hardware, crystal accessories—and even in the Murano glass-beaded ceiling in the living room—play off luxurious silk and velvet upholstery.

    Powell designed the main living area as a sophisticated environment for entertaining. “I think it’s very luxe, but comfortable at the same time,” he says. “I don’t think it’s overly ostentatious. I don’t want it to be unapproachable.”
    amazing bathroom, best design solution, amazing bath furnitures, The master bath combines marble tile, custom vanities with black glass tops and polished chrome hardware.

    The master bath combines marble tile, custom vanities with black glass tops and polished chrome hardware.

    Powell lavished attention on custom furnishings, fabrics and countless details, from the lamp shades he designed in silk with velvet trim to the buckles and accoutrements he added to the pillows, also of his own design.

    A soothing color palette of blues, grays and black in the main living spaces gives way to a simple black-and-white scheme in the master suite. A custom black-lacquered bed is centered before a backdrop of hand-flocked velvet wallpaper from India and a black crystal chandelier hangs from a black-mirrored medallion. “I love the crispness and the play of just black and white,” says Powell.

    Throughout the home, Powell had his Benjamin Moore paint selections custom-blended to achieve the effects he wanted. “All of the paints were darkened by 15, 25 or 75 percent because I just wanted the richness and the depth of color,” he explains. “I also had some fun with finishes. In the master bedroom, even though the walls are jet black, it’s jet black in a pearl finish so it gives them a sheen.”
    amazing luxury bedroom, amazing bedroom furnitures, best bedroom solutions, luxury homestyle Powell designed the black lacquer-and-glass platform bed and the pillows in the master suite.

    Powell designed the black lacquer-and-glass platform bed and the pillows in the master suite.


    Powell and Johnson lived in the apartment throughout the design process, enduring “two years’ worth of plaster dust,” says Powell, who went to so much effort because he and Johnson planned to make this their home for the next 10 years.

    Then fate intervened when Johnson got a call from the Smith Center for the Performing Arts in Las Vegas. The opportunity for him to shape this new institution as vice president and CFO was too good to pass up, so Powell and Johnson are moving again. Powell is already planning the interiors of their new home in Turnberry Place. He will continue working with clients on the East Coast, while cultivating business out West.

    Ironically, friends remark that Powell’s glamorous abode in Arlington was somehow a hint of things to come. “Most people say, ‘You’re so ahead of yourself. This is Vegas. This is what you need to be doing now.”


    INTERIOR DESIGN:
    William Powell, William Powell Interiors, Inc., Arlington, Virginia, and Las Vegas, Nevada.

Old World Modern

    Old World Modern


    When Mariana and Jack White moved into their 1988 center-hall Colonial in Fairfax Station, Virginia, they loved their home’s spaciousness and bucolic setting. Over time, however, their aesthetic changed and they began to feel that the house lacked the visual impact they wanted. The family room was dark; the living and dining rooms were a mishmash of colors. “We had what I called an Easter egg house,” Jack White recalls. “It was full of Colonial colors like blue and pink.” The Whites wanted to lighten the space, to create a more sophisticated palette. They also wanted the house to have a sense of architectural detail, yet feel fresh and modern.
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    LUXURY HOMESTYLE


    old art decoration, modern decoration, best old furnitures

    MODERN HOMESTYLE DECORATION

    To accomplish this challenging list of goals, the couple turned to McLean, Virginia-based interior designer Barbara Hawthorn, whose work Mariana White had seen in the pages of HOME & DESIGN. “I said to Barbara, ‘I need light,’” Mariana says. “She said with the right colors it would be sunny every day.”

    The Whites put their faith in Hawthorn, who devised a plan that would emphasize the home’s classic lines while infusing it with a modern flair. As the designer explains it, Jack White had gone to Oxford and loved the ornate woodwork inside its venerable buildings. Hawthorn was inspired to create a space “reminiscent of Oxford, with a sense of Old World craftsmanship, but do it in a modern way.”
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    HOMESTYLE ACCENT

    The result is an interior in which intricate millwork and architectural finishes such as moldings, cornices and friezes all figure heavily into the design scheme. At the same time, clean-lined, simple furnishings communicate a more contemporary aesthetic and offset the elaborate backdrop of walls and trim.

    The architectural finishes are particularly prevalent in the entryway, a two-story space that feels both airy and elegant. To achieve the effect they wanted, Hawthorn and her clients pored over catalogs, choosing a mix of Greek-, Roman- and Victorian-themed cartouches in the shapes of grape leaf clusters, flowers and acanthus leaves. “Each cartouche is different,” Hawthorn says.
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    LUXURY HOME PLANS

    All the decorative moldings in the entryway, and the door frames, were handcrafted by Warrickshire Woodcrafters of Reston, Virginia, using Indonesian mahogany. Hawthorn added large-scale dark-stained frames to the wide doorways leading into the living and dining rooms, integrating the existing window transoms above them into the design with faux-paint treatments. In fact, the interior doors in the foyer area are all “plain old builder doors,” says Jack White. Rather than replace them, Hawthorn saved money by having them faux-painted to look like heavy mahogany with an inlay of lighter fruitwood. “I had to find just the right value that was golden and had depth,” Hawthorn recalls. She turned to decorative painter Paul Levy for the job.
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    BEST LIVINGROOM SOLUTIONS

    Though the designer carried the Oxford theme into the rest of the house, the living and dining rooms were transformed largely through paint (trading the “Easter-egg” colors for soft creams), upholstery and new, more modern carpets. “We took the traditional furniture and reupholstered it in modern fabrics,” says Hawthorn. “They have beautiful pieces that weren’t showcased enough so I created vignettes with the furniture and their art to draw attention to them.” Decorative wood moldings over the fireplace in the living room were shadowed and glazed to bring them into relief.
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    LIVINGROOM MODERN DECORATION

    The family room, which adjoins the kitchen, underwent a major transformation. “We wanted to lighten the space and make it feel bigger,” Hawthorn explains. She replaced the traditional fireplace with a wider, more contemporary one, which has the effect “of making the room seem stretched out.” The new fireplace surround is made of eye-catching honey onyx and Walker Zanger glass tiles, and the hearth is limestone. Columns to either side are actually pull-out-drawers that hold videos. Laser-cut lattice doors above conceal a 62-inch TV.


    The walls were painted a soft yellow and woven Conrad shades replaced the draperies so as not to obstruct the natural light. Wherever possible, Hawthorn installed LED lighting.

    Prior to the remodel, knee walls had separated the kitchen area from the family room. Under the auspices of Cabin John, Maryland, architect Robert Wilkoff, these half-walls were replaced by columns, which served to open up the room. The door to the powder room was strategically moved out of kitchen view and tray ceilings trimmed with architectural accents were added above the dining and kitchen areas, along with chair rails and crown moldings to connect the family room and kitchen with the rest of the house. Wilkoff drew up an elevation of the family room area to show the Whites how the room would look.

    Back in the entryway, a huge chandelier hangs from the second-floor ceiling. It epitomizes what Hawthorn was trying to create: a perfect balance of old and new. “It had to be simple so as not to interfere with the moldings,” she says. In its elaborate setting, it is simple and elegant and a little bit modern. “At night,” says Jack White, “the chandelier disappears, and all you see is lights.”

http://contemporary-luxury-interior-design.blogspot.com/

Friday, November 27, 2009

Casual Opulence

    Casual Opulence

    Among the many joys homeowners experience when decorating a new residence is the ability to put into context—and sometimes even into words—their own unique lifestyle. Eric and Kerry Cole turned to interior designer Alice Busch of Great Falls Distinctive Interiors to help them realize a way of living Busch termed “casual opulence” in their new Ashburn, Virginia, home.

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    LUXURY INTERIOR DESIGN

    “They were very clear about the generalities of what they wanted,” Busch says of the Coles, who envisioned their new home in the Belmont Country Club enclave as a haven that, while luxurious, could still support the day-to-day energy of their three young children. “She loved the richness and comfort of a Ralph Lauren look, and he wanted something more impressive and opulent. So we had to meet in the middle,” Busch says.

    Kerry Cole agrees. “My husband is very Versace. But I’m home with the kids and wanted something that, while beautiful, would be really comfortable,” she says.

    The end result is an amalgam of easy elegance. Grounded in rich woods and sparkling with jewel-toned fabrics, the rooms are beautiful but appointed to stand the test of time—one of Busch’s signature decorating mandates. “We had to take special care with the durability and quality of the materials we used. Most of the carpets and rugs have patterns and are very child-proof,” she says.

    One such rug presides in the dining room, which, like the many fine meals the Coles enjoy there, is a sensual delight. A grand table imported from Italy is surrounded by chairs with distressed wood frames and nailhead trim. Busch selected deep burgundy upholstery on the chair fronts, while the backs are covered in neutral suede. Shadowy, heavily textured walls reveal a stencil pattern that complements the detail in the damask drapes. “Even though it has a rich and elegant feel, the room still looks worn,” Busch says. “The opulence in this room is in the fabrics, and the walls are made to look very old.”

    In the kitchen, which initially had been earmarked for dark cherry cabinetry, Busch opted instead to lighten things up with white cabinets and a central cherry-based island that dovetails nicely with the wood furniture in the adjacent breakfast room. Dusty red toile wallpaper and pencil pleat balloon valances in a Scalamandré plaid also help to relate the two spaces. “The kitchen adds the lighter element,”

    Busch says. “We had to integrate this very large space so instead of doing it with a deep tone of color we did it in other ways. It’s cheerful and open, a little country but tastefully so.”

    The nearby great room, where the family congregates casually, is awash in saturated neutrals and golds that create a warm and cozy atmosphere with just the slightest nod to the outdoors. (A new tiered stone terrace off the room is planned). As well as housing loads of closed storage for children’s toys, the room accommodates two custom sofas which are so deep, Busch says, without their back cushions they’re the depth of a twin bed. More formal gatherings are staged in the conservatory. In this room that Busch describes as “sophisticated without being ostentatious,” a grand piano is offset by a gracious seating area.

    Upstairs, Busch also created a sweet bedroom for the Cole girls with room to grow, with two beds adorned with hand-carved birds and a continuous, wall-long valance that sweeps over not only the windows but also canopies the beds.

    For the master suite, Eric Cole had a clear mandate. “He travels a lot and wanted everything at the level of some of the wonderful five-star hotels he stays at,” Busch says. She achieved that aura with a mix of calming sea shades, a soft-patterned rug and an eye-grabbing sunburst canopy bed whose romanticism the Coles “simply couldn’t resist,” she says. The room also has a spacious sitting area with a secretary where Kerry Cole attends to her correspondence, a working fireplace, two sumptuous club chairs, and even a full breakfast bar and table—another nod to luxurious hotel suite living. “We used striae on the walls to add complexity and visual interest,” Busch notes, “and it really helps pull out the background panels behind the bed and the pillows.”

    Aside from helping the Coles realize their dream home, Busch was able to complete the task in less than four months—a feat made even more remarkable since the couple did not contact her until well after the building process was set in motion.

    “A lot of our work is done preconstruction, which we love because we are able to do things like move windows a few inches here and there,” Busch says. “This was not quite the case here. We had to go in bathrooms and take out light fixtures, rework cabinetry.”

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    WORK-ROOM INTERIOR SOLUTIONS

    Mustard-colored walls and tasseled draperies in gold and russet plaid lend a masculine feel to the library, with its regency mahogany desk and Hancock and Moore leather desk chair.

    Busch credits her “enormously decisive” clients with the ability to move swiftly and, most importantly, in a professionally cooperative manner. She notes that Eric Cole told her early on he would give her the same respect he expects when clients come to him as an expert in his field. “He said, ‘I’ll follow your lead,’” says Busch. “And as a result we were able to achieve something remarkable.”

    Writer Catherine Applefeld Olson is based in Alexandria, Virginia. Lydia Cutter is a McLean, Virginia-based photographer.

    Interior Design: Alice Busch, Great Falls Distinctive Interiors, Inc., Chantilly, Virginia.

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    KITCHEN DESIGN IDEAS


    The spacious kitchen is filled with the kinds of touches that lend the rest of the home its elegance: beaded white cabinetry and a cherry wood island with carved finials, as well as sleek granite countertops. The walls are papered in toile, and scalamande plaid balloon valances adorn the windows. The wallpaper continues into the breakfast area, on the other side of the breakfast bar, connecting the two spaces.

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    LUXURY LIVINGROOM DECORATION


    Filled with saturated neutrals and gold tones, the great-room-where the family tends to congregate-provides a warm, inviting space to sit by the fire or watch TV. Extra deep sofas are custom-made by Great Falls Distinctive Interiors and covered in textured fabric from fabricut; the coffee table by woodland offers plenty of space for the family to spread out games.

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    INTERIOR SOLUTIONS

    In the master bedroom, interior designer Alice Busch chose a palette of sea shades and a subtly patterned rug to create a soothing, restful environment.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Amazing Pentouse Interior Design by Craig Steely

    Amazing Pentouse Interior Design by Craig Steely


    The “Ludwig Apartment“ is located in San Fransisco, California and it is a new approach made by Craig Steely of a place that originally had four bedrooms and four bathrooms. Here is some of the information we found on the designer’s site concerning this project: “the original 4-bedroom/4-bath penthouse was a rabbit’s warren of confusing rooms. In our re-design, rooms were combined and uses were re-assigned to allow the occupants to take advantage of the views looking north and south and the movement of the sun through out the day.Materials used are clear and etched 1/2″ glass, slabs of Black walnut, hand made mosaic tile walls, and gun blued steel.”- via Momoy.com

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    LUXURY MODERN KITCHEN


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    LIVING ROOM MODERN FURNITURES

Saturday, November 21, 2009

November 2009 Project

    Sorry For not post any article due to very busy. Below is my project and still have few that i not post it yet. I will try my best to post all the pictured. For those who want to visit my project, please give me a call. Below is my project list :-

    Kedah
    - Anak Bukit ( Stand Alone )
    - Tandop ( Factory Lot ) X 2 units
    - Tandop ( Stand Alone )
    - Sungai Petani ( Factory Lot )
    - Kubang Sepat ( Factory Lot )
    - Wang Perah ( Stand Alone )
    - Binjal ( Stand Alone )
    - Hutan Kampung ( Stand Alone )

    Pulau Pinang
    - Jawi ( Factory Lot )
    - Bukit Tengah ( Stand Alone )
    - Nibong Tebal ( Shop Lot )

    Sarawak
    - Bintulu X 2 units


    Nov and Dec Time Table
    23 - 25 Nov 2009
    Will Be at Phuket Island ( Thailand ) to verify stand alone project.

    26 Nov 2009
    Will be at Nibong Tebal to visit few project there.

    27 Nov 2009
    Morning will be at Alor Setar to switch on sound and at the evening , i will be at Jawi to switch on another stand alone project.

    28 - 29 Nov 2009
    Will be at Hatyai ( Thailand ) to verity a shop lot project.

    1 - 3 Dec 2009
    Will be at Kuala Lumpur to visit few project.

    10 - 14 Dec 2009
    Will Be at Sarawak to verify few project and at the same time to setup a processing factory.

    20 - 25 Dec 2009
    Maybe will Be at Hong Kong to meet up with a bird nest buyer.

    End of Dec 2009
    Will be at Indonesia.
    ________________________________________________________

    Sarawak Project ( Stand Alone )
    Size : 30 X 80
    Design : Open Roof
    Sarawak Project ( Stand Alone )
    Size : 20 X 80
    Design : Open Roof

    Bukit Tengah Jawi ( Stand Alone )
    Size : 40 X 100
    Design : Open Roof
    Alor Setar ( Factory Lot )
    Size : 20 X 40
    Design : Window Type

    Gurun Sik Project ( Stand Alone )
    Size : 20 X 60
    Design : Open Roof

    Alor Setar Project ( Industrial Lot )
    Size : 25 X 80
    Design : Dog Kernel

    Sungai Petani Project ( Factory Lot )
    Size : 25 X 70
    Design : Open Roof
    Pokok Sena Project ( Stand Alone )
    Size : 20 X 60 feet
    Design : Open Roof

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Herman Miller

    Herman Miller


    Individual office desk from Herman Miller Luxury Desk By Herman Miller
    Abak is a freestanding furniture range based on the beam construction principle that brings a lightness and visual elegance to single or grouped workstations. The slim profile worksurfaces, available in a choice of veneers or high-performance melamine, further add to the elegance of this Italian design. Cable management can be as light or as extensive as a particular workstation demands-there is a choice of leg profile and of underworksurface cable capacity for every need.

    Luxury design By Herman Miller


    Create efficient collaborative spaces with Abak from Herman Miller

    The system’s optional height-adjustability is a major benefit in team environments where several people are sharing a workstation, and an ancillary range of mobile tables and storage elements make this an ideal solution for collaborative team environments.
    Interior Design
    Furnish open plan spaces with Abak desking

    Interior Design By Herman Miller

    Low screening provides articulation between workstations and accommodates paper trays, telephone trays and similar tools to aid productivity and tidy the worksurface.
    Luxury Design By Herman Miller

    The range is ideally suited to team spaces where co-operation takes precedence over hierarchy or territoriality.
     Herman Miller
    Mirra task seating from Herman MillerHerman Miller

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