Top Mountain Architects

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For our September/October 2011 issue, we combed the high country to bring you the sixth edition of our Top Mountain Architects & Interior Designers list—a comprehensive guide to the most talented and influential design professionals at work in the West today. So whether you’re beginning to plan your next project or simply dreaming for the future, we hope you’ll pick up a copy of the issue and keep this guide around to reference time and time again. Plus, its pages are full of the spectacular results—gorgeous homes from Tahoe to Telluride—that occur when these inspired individuals get to work.

Here come a few highlights from the issue, and be sure to visit mountainliving.com to browse more stories and highlights.

A New Take on Tahoe: Peek inside a modern shoreline residence in Incline Village, California, and see how its interiors capture the spirit of a classic Lake Tahoe lodge—and marry it with a modern sensibility.

Bridge House: A home inspired by suspension bridges? See architect Tommy Hein’s architectural masterpiece—a Telluride residence that stands big against the striking panorama of the San Sophia mountains.

Our Best & Brightest: Four of our top mountain interior designers really light up for these dazzling designs.

Visit mountainliving.com for more.


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We’re fortunate to feature the work of some very talented architects and interior designers in each issue of Mountain Living. But we’re often left wondering, what designs would they create for themselves? That’s what we set out to discover in our July issue.

What we found was unexpected. To see for yourself, you’ll just have to pick up a copy of the issue, on newsstands today, or spend some time at mountainliving.com. But we can say that while the architects and designers featured in this issue may not have one signature look, they certainly do have a way. No matter the vision they’re presented with, whether it’s their clients’ or their own, they’re able to bring it to life and make it “home.” To us, that’s the mark of a great designer.

You can click here to browse highlights from the issue, from designers’ favorite products to the top-notch getaways they’ve kept secret until now, and don’t miss these fresh spaces:

Loft Revival: In a former flour mill in Bozeman, interior designer Susie Hoffmann turns 1,000 square feet into a smart and stylish live/work space. Click here to browse the photos.

Taking Liberties: Montana architect Larry Pearson departs from his signature rustic style to craft a personal home with Midcentury Modern roots. Click here to browse the photos.

Cabin Reincarnate: Designer Linda Perlman’s historic cabin preserves the past while making a bold statement about the future of Western design. Click here to browse the photos.

Cohesive Connection: Architects—and husband-and-wife team—Bruce and Jodie Wright blend life and work in their eco-friendly Telluride home. Click here to browse the photos.

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Mountain Living‘s Architecture & Design Issue hits newsstands!

What’s in its pages?

Inspiring design pros and show-stopping spaces, of course. We’re also excited to bring you the fifth edition of Top Mountain Architects & Interior Designers, our exclusive guide to the design pros we’ve featured in the pages of ML over the years—as well as those whose work we know and admire. You’ll also get the chance to take a look at stunning photos of a modern dwelling that’s turning heads in a Wyoming town.

And don’t miss the story of a collection of family dwellings in California’s wine country, each pieced together out of reclaimed materials from dismantled buildings.

Visit mountainliving.com to browse more beautiful photos from the issue, and don’t miss these stories…

Insider’s Guide to Telluride: Uncover more than 15 tips and local hotspots to make the most of your next trip to this old mining town turned sophisticated mountain mecca.

In Perfect Harmony: Always dreamed of a slice of life along a lake? In this larger-than-life home on the shores of Montana’s Whitefish Lake, opposites attract: rustic and refined, masculine and feminine.

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