Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Knocked down on the craws of the butt in Jackson, Vioming, new Skyway Residence would CLB It feels less as a house and more like a bridge between the earth and the sky. It is surrounded by a tetronic range to the mountain of Northern and Sheep in the East, the home seems to be treated through the valley, effect amplifier carefully setting up on Stripper, tilted terrain. The design is also approaching tradition and modernity, weaving connected by natural materials, timeless systems and sustainable systems to create a family inheritance in New York, who seeks a withdrawal that could develop as a whole.
The project was rooted in cooperation. “Our relationship with home owner is a huge part of this story,” says Eric Logan, partner in CLB. “Due to trust and relationships we built over the years, we could challenge each other and ultimately arrive at the design that we all feel proud,” says Eric Logan, a partner in CLB. The owner of the house, the east coast, parently with affection for her state stay, wanting something different for family western escape – something more tactless, warm and reflective about the scenery. CLB reacted by a design that includes contrast: protection and openness, peaceful withdrawal and deletion of drama. As Logan Notes, “You come to take the space between the contrast and enjoy them. The house is seated between a quiet, contemplative yard and expansive views in the valley below.”
Real estate 49-Acre (20 hectares) dictated a design that is as much as the land itself. Local high limitations meant that the house must enter the hill and it has become a defined characteristic of the project. Arrival in the home begins with a wet yard carved in the slope before they open to expansive views dramatically. Organized around the axis of the North-south, the main level of domestic valley, with live, diner and kitchen spaces, while recording mountain panoramas, while lower levels into the ground below with three bedrooms, two bedrooms, two bedrooms, two bedrooms. Additional pension separates from the main structure of bedroom, living areas and wellness extras to visit the family.
The stone got from Montana belittles the exterior and continues indoors, dissolving the border between the interior and landscapes. Hot Cedar Ceilings and Walnut Millwork add a wealth home, while blackened steel panels borrow refined edge camps and built-in ins. These material choices resonate the surrounding environment and increase the balance of tradition and modern details.
“We combined natural materials like skin, wood and stone with custom furniture related to details in the entire internal architecture,” says Sarah Kennedy, interior designer in CLB. “We incorporated a rich cedar and nut to connect with traditional aesthetic, but they played these luxurious textures with more more refined, modern detail.”
From architectural elements to the smallest detail, craftsmen defines the project. Swimming bright sculpture lightens the staircase for entry, handmade dining table cells of family gatherings, and adjusted mats give their heads to the topography of the serpent valley topography. Even the settlement lighting is designed for regional function references such as rivers and Lodbow loops.
Inside, designers relied in a pleasant, inviting access to Liem trends inspired by Scandinavian, who have prevailed in modern home design for years. The interior of the interior accepts earth tones, including sage, ochres and burned orange tones that evoke variable shades in the morning Vioming landscape. This ground palette ensures that the views remain the main focal point of residence.
Geothermal system, high-performance insulation and tightly sealed envelope buildings make efficient and summer and winter. The CLB replaced this as a “legacy house” – a place that could take generation, minimizing environmental impact during the maximization of widening.
To find out more about Skywiev and CLB residence, visit clBrachitects.com.
Photography Matthew Millman.