Hello,
the range of staircases is very large, and we don’t like the yellow-orange colored beech staircases so much. Which staircase did you choose, and are you satisfied with it?
Best regards,
Sabine
the range of staircases is very large, and we don’t like the yellow-orange colored beech staircases so much. Which staircase did you choose, and are you satisfied with it?
Best regards,
Sabine
K
Knallkörper3 Jan 2017 16:26We have a half-turn concrete staircase with a granite finish (Juparana Colombo). The railing is still under discussion.
I
Irgendwoabaier3 Jan 2017 17:03Half-turn open wooden staircase: spruce stringer, red beech treads, spruce handrail, steel rods.
Musketier schrieb:
Unfortunately, walnut was too expensive. How much more would walnut have cost?
Best regards,
Sabine
Stairs are such a beautiful topic. I would have loved to have an open straight staircase or a staircase with a landing. But the entire house is planned around the stairs, especially with only 7.30 meters (24 feet) total width.
So it became a double quarter-turn reinforced concrete staircase. For the surface, we are using nero assoluto granite, which will then be flamed, brushed, and impregnated. The joints will provide contrast in white / mircocorn. The railing is not yet finalized, but we are really taken with this "broken glass" look. There will also be seven downward-facing LED stair spotlights from the ground floor to the first floor.
Despite many compromises with the stairs, we hope it will be a real eye-catcher.
So it became a double quarter-turn reinforced concrete staircase. For the surface, we are using nero assoluto granite, which will then be flamed, brushed, and impregnated. The joints will provide contrast in white / mircocorn. The railing is not yet finalized, but we are really taken with this "broken glass" look. There will also be seven downward-facing LED stair spotlights from the ground floor to the first floor.
Despite many compromises with the stairs, we hope it will be a real eye-catcher.
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