contemporary forest retreat
I found another beautiful dwelling place that I would love to call my own home and it inspires ideas for my goal to build my own home. I love the open design and the use of wood and iron. It is beautiful.This dwelling place is in the foothills above Snoqualmie not far from North Bend, Washington. The 2,100 square foot residence has been designed by Johnston Architects and built by Tall Tree Construction. I love it when I am able to find quote from architects on their ideas and processes for their work.
This house was built on site with many materials found, milled and crafted on the site. Blow-down trees from storms provided the logs that were milled into siding, fascias and trim. Large firs and cedars were felled, cured and processed to provide beams and some framing materials. A ground source heat pump supplemented by solar water preheating supplies energy to the house. To this, recycled materials, FSC certified materials, grey water recycling and other strategies are the basis of the soon to be achieved LEED Silver status of this house.The historic fabric of this complex lies in the history of use of the land and indoor/outdoor occupation of forested space. The mud room, nearby wood storage, use of varied floor materials to shake off the debris of the outside, simple roof forms are all part of this solution. Rather than dig the house into its hillside, we bridged across for an upper floor entry, minimizing grading and other disruption to the existing environment. Two thousand native plantings were made to restore the forest floor upon completion. Even on a grey and rainy day this forest retreat is filled with light.
found on 1 Kindesign via dwellinggawker.