House on a Bay
The conceptual design for this project was born of a desire to reconcile, and make evident, different levels that exist naturally on the site. In this process the public programmatic elements were placed on the ground while the private elements of the building were elevated above the site, disengaging the earth below and engendering a sense of privacy. One end of the cantilevered bar was placed against the edge of a stone escarpment and rotated towards the easterly horizon of the Atlantic Ocean. The public spaces housed in the lower bar are grounded through the bar’s materiality, a choice that further divides the building into discrete volumes. The distinction between the two volumes is heightened by the weightlessness of the floating mass above, supported by steel posts that echo the scale and imperfection of surrounding spruce trees.
Inhabitants and visitors are led toward a protected entry by concrete site walls and large-scale paving blocks. The opening becomes a visual and physical connection through the building’s otherwise solid mass. The geometry of the site walls and their relationship to the opening emphasize a cross axis that penetrates the building, reaching out into the landscape to subdivide the lower site into quadrants defined by varying conditions: light, vegetation, terrain, and water.
General Contractor: Warren Construction Group
Landscape Architect: Michael Boucher Landscape Architecture
Structural Engineer: Thorton Tomasetti
Mechanical Engineer: Integrated Energy Systems
Civil Engineer: Gartley & Dorsky Engineering & Surveying
Envelope Consultant: Building Envelope Solutions
Lighting Design: Peter Knuppel
Interior Design: Urban Dwellings
Photography by Paul Warchol
Drone Photography by Ken Woisard
2024 - Future House Awards, Private Homes
2023 - Merit Award, Residential, New England AIA Design Awards
2023 - Honor Award, AIA Maine
2022 – Citation: Ecology & Energy, Boston Society of Architecture Residential Design Awards