Home Design Ponte Vedra Beach FL

Archeologists in Ponte Vedra Beach may someday attribute the decline of a once-great civilization to the overabundance of suburban homes that typically feature peculiar two-story grand entry-ways that were never even used.

Defenders Inc
(904)824-8866
6 South Roscoe Boulevard
Ponte Vedra Beach, FL
Creative Designs & Landscaping Inc
(904)543-8390
200 Executive Way
Ponte Vedra Beach, FL
Aardvark Landscape
(904)827-0115
76 South Roscoe Boulevard
Ponte Vedra Beach, FL
Steve
ADDED APPEAL Services LLC.

904.312.8271
72 Ponte Vedra Colony Cir.
Ponte Vedra Beach, FL
Double J Repair Shop
(904)285-4573
2 South Roscoe BLVD# B
Ponte Vedra Beach, FL
Proctor Ace/Ponte Verde
(904)285-8101
A1A @ South R 210
Ponte Vedra Beach, FL
Short Pine Nursery & Landscaping
(904)285-2440
12 Bonita Drive
Ponte Vedra Beach, FL
Ace Floral Emporium
(904)285-3660
880 A1A North
Ponte Vedra Beach, FL
Defenders Inc- The
(904)285-2346
6 Roscoe Boulevard South
Ponte Vedra Beach, FL
Turfection
(904)273-0266
10036 Sawgrass Drive West
Ponte Vedra Beach, FL

Home Design

Source: REMODELING Magazine
Publication date: December 1, 2006

By Dick Kawalek

Archeologists may someday attribute the decline of a once-great civilization to the overabundance of suburban homes that typically feature peculiar two-story grand entry-ways that were never even used.

Of course this is a joke, but there is no shortage of two-story entryways seemingly “pasted-on” to house facades in our culture, a trend stemming from the discovery of this cheap eye-catcher sometime during the 1970s. Providing neither shelter nor shade, they have no historical counterpart short of Hadrian's villa, but perhaps fill the need for an icon denoting “front door.” We have lost sight of other more gracious ways to enter a home.

We abandoned our love of the front porch as we embraced the automobile and air conditioning. The front garden gradually lost favor, and with it the picket fence and garden gate. Nonetheless, these can be interesting and engaging visual features on the front of a home that distinguish the entrance and provide a nostalgic and endearing welcome. Landscaping should project toward the street, not just hide where the house meets the ground.

Today most folks enter houses through the garage or through a back door, which is fine, but it doesn't provide any delight. Builders often fail to create a useful walkway or anywhere to park at the front of the house, so visitors pull up to the garage door — and that's their first impression.

Click here to read full article from Custom Home