Anonymous wrote:It's just a typical nice new house, OP. They almost defintely had a budget which limits a lot of what you can do, and they certainly had a client who directed the work (or nixed some suggestions). It's totally fine. I'm an architecture professor, by the way.
What's your beef with GTM? This seems like a "stealth" competitor post.
Anonymous wrote:It's just a typical nice new house, OP. They almost defintely had a budget which limits a lot of what you can do, and they certainly had a client who directed the work (or nixed some suggestions). It's totally fine. I'm an architecture professor, by the way.
What's your beef with GTM? This seems like a "stealth" competitor post.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. Ya'll are crazy. No foyer, PR off the dining room (and looks small and ugly), weird entry off back to kitchen, terrible basement layout, cheap sliding doors, bad window placement upstairs, horribly small deck, no patio, overwhelming large on a hill, crazy roof line, and on....They want $3.4M.
LOL on people saying they were inspired by the 1920s.
Anonymous wrote:Ok...
As someone who loves historic houses, and who has owned very nice old houses of the 1910-1930s vintage, and who currently lives in a handsome 1930s colonial, I don't see what the anger is all about?
And, actually, I really like this house. The architects are clearly inspired by 1920s architecture and they've updated it to 2026 living. The layout is efficient for a prosperous modern professional family. The interior design is excellent, subtle, tasteful, easy on the eye. Yeah it's waspy for the 21st century, but it's nice. And it's also a great portfolio space for customizing to your own tastes.
My one argument with the design is that the exterior architecture is clearly modeled after a 1920s colonial cottage style house, when this house is much bigger and I would have gone with a different exterior design to match the scale. But this is a minor quibble. It's a handsome house. And it's better than 99% of the new builds I see out there. I would buy it if I was in the market.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This abomination is by GTM Architects and looks like some junior assistant living in an apartment designed this over beers with a friend. What's going on with them? It says Megan Lynn Interiors collaborated on it. I don't know her firm, but I would be embarrassed to have my name on this. When I was walking by, I assumed it was by one of the atrocious builders popping up in CCDC. Alas...some fool will part with his money.
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/3118-Patterson-St-NW-Washington-DC-20015/458904_zpid/?
What interior design? Its white and black with verrrrry basic bathrooms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok...
As someone who loves historic houses, and who has owned very nice old houses of the 1910-1930s vintage, and who currently lives in a handsome 1930s colonial, I don't see what the anger is all about?
And, actually, I really like this house. The architects are clearly inspired by 1920s architecture and they've updated it to 2026 living. The layout is efficient for a prosperous modern professional family. The interior design is excellent, subtle, tasteful, easy on the eye. Yeah it's waspy for the 21st century, but it's nice. And it's also a great portfolio space for customizing to your own tastes.
My one argument with the design is that the exterior architecture is clearly modeled after a 1920s colonial cottage style house, when this house is much bigger and I would have gone with a different exterior design to match the scale. But this is a minor quibble. It's a handsome house. And it's better than 99% of the new builds I see out there. I would buy it if I was in the market.
Uh hunh. See the realtor or someone from GTM found the thread.