The 2017 Home of the Year Party!
Mountain Living journeyed to Aspen to celebrate this year's Home of the Year, in serious style.
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Mountain Living journeyed to Aspen to celebrate this year's Home of the Year, in serious style.
From croissants to crème brûlée, the French know their way around a well-designed kitchen.
Furniture, fixtures and materials in splashy hues that invite a sense of lakeside calm into the home.
A cozy getaway provides a secluded family haven with bold style and breath-taking mountain-and-lake views.
A Montana retreat sits on delightful landscapes and seamlessly blends rugged and sleek touches.
Gather 'round, pull up a chair, and delight in these designs, inspired by rough woods, stone hearths, and Mother Nature.
An easy-to-maintain contemporary home boasts unobstructed views of the Teton Range while sitting lightly on the land.
Mountain Living invites you to take a look at each of the following 15 homes and then vote for your favorite!
The site of a former asphalt plant is reclaimed with native plantings, flowing water, and restored buildings.
A Manhattan family relocates to the mountains in this reinterpreted contemporary southwestern design.
This 1,000-square-foot sophisticated little playhouse boasts an infinity pool and knockout views.
From a sleek glass case to Oprah's wine tunnel, these luxurious designs are completely devoted to vino.
A high-end home can be designed to be respectful to the environment and low-maintenance in the long-term.
Window-walls, rich woods, textured concrete and weathered steel connect a Montana home to the great outdoors.
A Whitefish, Montana, home is designed to capture sunlight and mountain vistas to the east and west.
A Canadian interior designer teams up with an Idaho builder to create a beautiful cross-border collaboration.
A unique take on Western home design offers sophisticated style for the owners—plus a magical playroom for the kids.
Architect Larry Pearson creates a personal idyll in Montana that's as sensitive to its waterfront site as it is to the views.
How do timber frame homes rank on the green living scale? Test your knowledge—what you learn may surprise you.
Thoughtful design details and a rustic palette of reclaimed materials give a new Colorado guest Home an old soul.
It's hard to believe these luxurious mountain homes were once decades-old, dilapidated buildings.
The challenge: Design a prefabricated house that really works in a high-country climate—and showcases green and local materials.
This Colorado home evokes the centuries-old tradition and sustainability of ancient Native American dwellings.
There's nothing better after a day on the mountain than a soak in the tub or a steam shower.