11 / 09
2018
Craig Steely Architecture created a seemingly roofless house that surrounds the living spaces by huge outdoor courtyards that direct the view up.
Architect: Craig Steely Architecture
Location: Atherton California USA
Year: 2018
Gross Built Area: 2900 sq. ft. enclosed, 3000 sq. ft. courtyards
Lead Architect: Craig Steely AIA
Project Team: Luigi Silverman, Ryan Leidner, Tune Kantharoup, Anastasia Victor
Contractor: Drew Maran Construction
Structural Engineer: Strandberg Engineering
Landscape Architect: Elias Gonzalez
Photography: Darren Bradley
From the architect: Atherton California, just down El Camino Real from Stanford University, is in the heart of Silicon Valley. It is a suburban city characterized by mature trees and homes on large plots hidden behind fences.
The climate is temperate, almost Mediterranean and the owner of this house wanted a home where she could live outdoors as much as possible. Complicating this desire was that the lot is long and narrow and her view on all sides was of the backs of the neighboring houses which (like most typical suburban houses) are huge and blank. But above these neighboring houses, the mature tree canopy and sky were alive, constantly changing and breathtaking. Focusing on this view “up” rather than horizontally “out” we created a seemingly roofless house that surrounds the living spaces by huge outdoor courtyards that direct the view up.
The living spaces are open planned and blur the connection between indoor/outdoor with retractable sliding doors and continuous materials like travertine on the floors and cedar on the walls. But what sets this building apart is the continuous curving wall that surrounds it. It fully encloses the house, blocking out the less desirable views, focusing on the more meaningful views and creating interest as the sunlight and shadows move through the day along it’s surfaces. At it’s most elemental, the curving wooden wall creates a visual backdrop seen through the interior landscape of plants and birch trees, animated by the shadows moving across it all day.
Unlike it’s neighbors, this house is not fenced off at it’s street perimeter. A meadow of native grasses flow from the sidewalk with existing oaks, redwoods and newly planted birch trees flowing inside and outside of the curving wooden wall.
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Roofless House by Craig Steely Architecture
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