On Trend: Bold and Black Exterior House Color
by Natalie Myers · 13 photos · 72 comments
When you strip the structure of distractions like coordinating trim color to body color, the eye is forced to focus on the design. When that design is a good modern one, the effect of an all-black exterior is minimalist and clean. Quite the wow factor.
by Giulietti Schouten Architects
Proposing an all-black exterior can be a little Stephen King scary for homeowners, and even designers. Breaking it up with white highlighting and a brightly hued front door helps the house get a warmer reception.
by r.o.i. Design
This Victorian in San Francisco, designed by Envelope A+D, may have launched the black house trend as early as 2007. It garnered much attention when it was completed and showed the world that black exteriors, trim and all, were exciting and edgy — not frightening.
Walk Around the Hood
The surprisingly small Clipper Residence looks grand in all black. The modern frosted-glass garage door and bright blue entry counterbalance the black facade, and add back the architectural details that got lost in the paint. This original design has spawned quite a few copies in San Francisco's Victorian neighborhoods.
Walk Around the Hood
The team behind Better Shelter in Los Angeles has this formula down to a science. They know how to transform a disastrous foreclosure in an underserved area into one of the hottest properties in the city. How better do you hide an ugly stucco job and get potential buyers to notice your house? Paint it all black, of course, including the surrounding stucco enclosure.
by Natalie Myers
Another property by Better Shelter has a lime green door. The bright and saturated hue is needed to keep the structure cheerful against the potentially dreary black backdrop. It also gives sellers that attention-grabbing element they desire. Lime green, teal, orange or red: Take your pick of bold front-door colors.
by Natalie Myers
Black does not have to be reserved for modern structures. It works on any style house, such as this Spanish one. It actually makes small bungalows look bigger and more formidable.
by Natalie Myers
Walking around my own neighborhood, I noticed this design theory put to good use in a dark gray variation. This cute bungalow stood out among the other neutral white, brown and beige homes on the dense street because of its dark facade and lovely sky blue front door. In bright sun, any black may become tempered and slightly faded to a dark gray.
by Natalie Myers
Another house in my neighborhood, equally small. As new construction, the designer could have picked any color; black was the chosen shade of modern and edgy.
by Natalie Myers
Is this a movement that I'm noticing more in Southern California, or have you seen it in your own neighborhoods? It seems to work especially well on small houses that otherwise wouldn't seem very special.
by ras-a, inc.
Not surprisingly the married architects behind the popular blog Chezerbey, Lauren and Kyle Zerbey, chose to paint their own bungalow in Seattle all black with bright white trim and warm wood accents. All black is the designers' choice.
by Natalie Myers
So you like the idea, but you just can't imagine doing it on your everyday house? If you're lucky enough to own a vacation property, that may be where you experiment. A woodsy cabin is the opposite of rustic when it's painted all black. A lime green picnic table and teal door add that cheerful pop of color.
by Stephanie Wiley Photography
A black house looks especially incredible in the snow. Quite serene and Nordic.
More:
Tour a black modern makeover in Arizona
Shou-Sogi-Ban is Setting the Siding World on Fire
What Color to Paint Your Front Door
by BAAN design
More:
Tour a black modern makeover in Arizona
Shou-Sogi-Ban is Setting the Siding World on Fire
What Color to Paint Your Front Door
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It is also a elegant color of something luxury.
Bluetime, interesting house, very commercial looking and not something every client would warm to, no pun intended. The metal will be a nice lower maintenance material. Traditionally I know darker metals were more susceptible to UV fading. My two cents, what makes the black to me here is the very nice contrast with the wood clad wing in the foreground.
These people are making the home, the urban environmant and the planet hotter. Which means everyone will waste more electricity further polluting the planet. I don't get it. Hundreds to thousands of years ago, people all over the Mediterranean are were smart enough to white wash buildings. What's the matter with people today?
As for concerns about fading, the darker the color, the more paint fading will show. That's why painters frequently recommend not going too dark because faded dark is like faded black jeans, not good.
I was told by the paint store pros that dark paints don't last nearly as long as lighter colors. Not only does black have more heat gain for the house interior, but the paint itself gets hotter so it breaks down, chips and wears much faster. In the end I went with Davenport Tan siding, Mink trim and Mulholland Yellow doors. And it cost SO MUCH to paint the house, I hope I don't have to do it again for at least 10 years.
Check out this link for more interesting info on heat island effect. www.epa.gov/heatisld/resources/pdf/GreenRoofsCompendium.pdf
Would love to use it on my own home accented with cedar!
Down here in the southern hemisphere (under the ozone hole where the sun is truly dangerous), dark grey / charcoal seams to be the colour of choice at the moment. But if you are painting a timber weatherboard house make sure you use a reflective undercoat and quality paint otherwise you can have problems with the boards warping.
The old style black houses were often a raw timber painted in a tar based product to protect the house and great for harsh conditions such as salt wind (or indeed snow - not that we see much of that down here).
Colour is a really personal thing and sadly too many of us don't put the time into selecting a hue that suits their house, garden and neighborhood. It's good to remember most of these buildings are someones home and I think it is great that some of us branch out and try to ensure the exterior of our home reflects the property (and our own) character.
In new construction, i would specify a rain screen type of wall sheathing and use high flow vented channels under the roof sheathing. Noticing that the west coat doesn't build with vented roof assembles because of fire prevention, but that could help reduce the solar gain.