Living Room Recessed Lighting Sectional Concrete Floors Rug Floors End Tables Design Photos and Ideas

Living, dining, and kitchen spaces flow into one another in the soaring great room. Here, the Sacramento firm placed new, polished concrete slabs over the original ones to alleviate unsightly cracks.
Blue, yellow, and pink accents enliven the living area, where guests relax on the *Gus Modern sectional sofa.
The view from the kitchen.
The elegant, modernist-inspired living space boasts vintage Barcelona chairs and a Cassina sectional. The French doors lead out to the courtyard.
The lower level features a bonus family room with a wall of built-in media cabinetry.
Iron louvers have been used along the western facade to create a narrow corridor between the screen and exterior walls of the main volume.
The concrete bearing walls are left exposed in the interior to tie the living spaces with the rock outcroppings.
The repurposed divider slides into place and helps trap heat generated from the wood-burning fireplace.
The timber doors of a former garage have been repurposed into a room partition that separates the main living area from the rest of the ground floor.
The front great room is intentionally public; the furniture-like wall (inspired by Mies’ Farnsworth house) creates privacy for all other rooms—even with no window coverings. No rooms have interior walls that connect with the outer perimeter of the house, echoing a design element of our 1958 E. Stewart Williams house in Palm Springs, CA.
Villa K look to views of the Atlas Mountains.
The living area is voluminous yet intimate.  A built-in seating nook maintains a direct view of the mountains, unobstructed by a low profile fireplace.