Steel Clad, Energy Saving, Shape Shifting—These Exterior Designs Stand Out on the Block

Desert home exterior painted pink with a yellow door.
Desert home exterior painted pink with a yellow door.
Desert home exterior painted pink with a yellow door.
COURTESY OF CLAIRE THOMAS

Everyone wants to live in the type of home where guests feel welcome as soon as they walk through the door. And while you can spend years creating just the right vibe inside, the truth is that the mood is often set from the sidewalk. When people first gaze at a house, it’s not unusual for them to have a visceral reaction.

A home’s exterior design cultivates a first impression—that ever-important curb appeal. Still, there are many options (and budget levels) to refresh your facade, from a new paint color to a complete architectural overhaul. Either way, the payoff is something homeowners and passersby alike get to enjoy every day.

Read on to see how these 10 exterior designs nail a memorable first impression. (Hint: Sometimes a simple flower box is a good starting point.)

Exterior Design With a Splashy Front Door

Mid-century modern house in desert with orange door.
PHOTO BY DANIELLE NAGEL

Danielle Nagel, the graphic designer and photographer behind Dazey LA, was once struggling to buy a home in Los Angeles’s competitive market. So it came as a surprise when she found a mid-century property during a visit to nearby Palm Springs. “Luckily, it was pretty turnkey aside from touching up a few things,” she says. One easy yet impactful design choice? Painting the front door a bright shade of orange. Since the color appears throughout the rest of the house, it hints at what’s to come.

Exterior Design That Puts an Addition Front and Center

House with all cream-beige exterior.
PHOTOGRAPHY BY JENNIFER HUGHES; DESIGN AND ARCHITECTURE BY FOWLKES STUDIO.

Paul Neaville and Marisa Luzzatto did not want to leave their Washington, D.C., home, even though their two growing kids seemed to be rapidly outgrowing it. The family had just redone their backyard, too, and felt like a common addition at the rear of the property would have wasted that project. Luckily, architect Catherine Fowlkes came up with a solution to rethink the layout, which included adding more square footage—to the front. Seen from the street, the extra space and a new porch are a fun twist on traditional features, complete with trendproof beige siding and gray brick.

Exterior Design With a Colorful Link to the Past

House painted pink with darker pink shutters and porch.
PHOTOGRAPHY BY JACQUELINE MARQUE

As Ellen Sitkin renovated the New Orleans family home she shares with her husband and two children, she and architect Kim Allen of Studio BKA had to stick to some strict preservation rules. The shotgun-style house was built circa 1914, and any permanent modernizations had to be approved by the Historic District Landmarks Commission. The pink porch, however, was an old-meets-new decision that matched the family’s and the city’s personalities. “Living in New Orleans, where the houses are supercolorful, I was like, I have to make it brighter,” she says. It’s a lesson in looking to your local color for inspiration.

Exterior Design That (Magically) Frames the Landscape

House in nature with giant screened-in porch connecting two buildings.
PHOTOGRAPHY BY GRETA RYBUS

For those who live in places with stunning vistas, the goal is to orient the property to soak in the surroundings as much as possible. Brad Horn and Maria Berman, the husband-and-wife architects behind Berman Horn Studio, were building a home from the ground up on 20 wooded acres in Maine—so they made the unique decision to split the main house and the guest quarters in two, linking them with a “screened-in” porch that resembles a greenhouse. “We almost wanted the house to be invisible, for you to see right through it,” Berman explains. The 60 screens can be disassembled come winter and allow the couple and their family to make the most of their time in the wild landscape. Talk about an epic sunset happy hour!

Exterior Design That Reflects the Energy Upgrade Within

Modern wood cabin seen from outside.
PHOTOGRAPHY BY NEIL LANDINO

When Alan Barlis, who founded the architecture firm BarlisWedlick, was asked to update this New York State property from its 1980s past, it turned into an undertaking that was as much about energy efficiency as it was about aesthetics. The timber frame cabin with brick and warm wood details kept its modern, cozy appeal from the outside. But inside, airtight insulation, new windows, a waterproof basement, and sealable fireplaces now lower the property’s energy usage by 70 percent.

Exterior Design With Modern Monochrome

Victorian home exterior painted all forest green.
PHOTOGRAPHY BY JULIE GOLDSTONE; STYLING BY MOLLY VELTE.

Chef-turned-designer Sara Manning and her husband, Drew, decided to settle their young family in a Victorian property in Vermont in part due to the “great front porch culture” on their street. Another exterior detail that felt right? The home’s monochrome forest green, which Sara simply covered with a few coats of fresh paint. Skipping the trim creates an unexpected look that blends right in with the leafy block.

Exterior Design That Goes From Boxy to Architectural Gem

House with wood exterior and wood slat pattern along front.
PHOTOGRAPHY BY VIRTUALLY HERE STUDIOS

Designer Shanty Wijaya could have followed in the footsteps of many a house flipper and simply painted the exterior of this originally boxy Los Angeles property to make it look like new. But instead, she created architectural interest from scratch by installing eco-friendly Accoya wood for a Scandi-meets-Japandi finish. To do this, Wijaya used tongue-in-groove boards for the siding, thicker slats to shade the front porch, and wider posts for the fence. “Even though it’s the same wood, it creates such depth and texture,” she says.

Exterior Design With a Major Vinyl Siding Glow-Up

Home exterior painted cream with front yard and flowerboxes.
PHOTOGRAPHY BY KAY VOLMAR

When Kay Volmar and her husband bought this Florida house sight unseen a decade ago, the contractor who inspected it gave them a single word of advice: Run. The property had many issues, and one of its biggest problems was that the vinyl siding had long ago seen better days. Still, Volmar saw promise. She centered the front door and painted it in Warm Springs by Benjamin Moore, a bright teal that pops against the brand’s beloved White Dove, which now appears on the refreshed siding. To top it off, a curved stone tile walkway and window boxes brimming with fragrant begonias, petunias, and verbena make you want to stop (not run) and smell the flowers.

Exterior Design That Channels a Euro Vacation

London mews home seen from outside with red windows and door.
PHOTOGRAPHY BY ALICIA WAITE

Even though developers had previously “white-boxed” the historic London mews home that Angus and Charlotte Buchanan of Buchanan Studio were fixing up, the creative couple was able to bring back plenty of character. Most notably, they removed drywall to reveal original bricks, added traditional tongue-and-groove paneling to the walls, and clad the ceiling in salvaged rafter beams. Lastly, they dotted the exterior windows and doors in a cheerful poppy red. Pull a bistro table and chairs out into the alley and “it feels like Paris,” notes Charlotte.

Exterior Design With the Long Term in Mind

House exterior shown with backyard and covered in black steel.
PHOTOGRAPHY BY JON MCMORRAN

After Adam Gilmer and his wife, Sara, bought a plot on Vancouver Island in 2016, they spent the next 10 months working with local firm Strong Built to create a steel-clad structure, which they share with their two young kids. The steel only needs to be washed occasionally, so the couple can avoid costly paint jobs down the road. “We wanted it to last forever,” says Adam. And it just might, given the material’s durability and the fact that its all-black facade is forever on trend.