Concrete House Design On A Sunken Plane Offers Expansive Views Of Distant Mountains

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This ridgetop house in Santa Fe is organized around two perpendicular board-formed concrete walls. The walls are an element of continuity, linking interior and exterior spaces and the landscape beyond. A narrow skylight runs the entire 125’ length of one of the walls, casting changing shadows on the rough concrete over the span of the day.

The front of the house is set deeply into the earth. You enter through a recessed courtyard and into a cool, private vestibule. An opening cut into one of the concrete walls then leads you into the main body of the house, where panoramic views of the Sangre de Christos mountains are revealed. Although there are large expanses of glass, they are all deeply shaded by cantilevered roof forms that create porches around the perimeter.

The house enhances a feeling of connection to the site, both physically, and temporally, and provides a true sense of shelter.


Project name: Sundial House
Architects: Specht Architects - https://www.spechtarchitects.com/
Location: Santa Fe, New Mexico, United States
Area: 330 m²
Year: 2020
Photographer:
Taggart Sorensen - http://www.taggphoto.com/
Casey Dunn - https://caseydunn.net/
Landscape Architect: James David
Interior Design: Norine Hayes


Jellyfish in Space by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/


#concretehouse #housedesign #americanhouses
Catégories
Location Maison à louer
Mots-clés
Private houses, ridge-top house, house design

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