The vertically organized building reads as a plywood volume susp…
The vertically organized building reads as a plywood volume suspended between two metal-clad walls.
Steve Keating
Projecting balconies offer outdoor access at each level, includi…
Projecting balconies offer outdoor access at each level, including the fourth, which tops out at the legal height limit of 35 feet.
Steve Keating
The main living floor is at the house’s top level, the better …
The main living floor is at the house’s top level, the better to enjoy the view over the trees to Lake Michigan.
Steve Keating
Clean detailing lends class to such economical materials as birc…
Clean detailing lends class to such economical materials as birch plywood (at the walls and ceilings) and engineered-wood flooring.
Steve Keating
Lighting tracks recessed into the plywood ceilings echo the blac…
Lighting tracks recessed into the plywood ceilings echo the black finish of the steel staircase.
Seattle architect Tom Lenchek is accustomed to fielding inquiries from around the country, so he listened patiently on the phone as a prospective client described his vision of a weekend retreat that would max out its lot’s 35-foot height limit. “A month later I get this DVD in the mail,” the architect says, “and it’s the client, going up in a bucket truck,” filming views that stretched across the treetops to the shores of Lake Michigan. Not long after, Lenchek found himself designing a house to occupy that same lofty perch.
“We put living spaces on the top, for the view, then started working our way down,” says Lenchek, who configured the building shell as a plywood-clad volume suspended between two metal-wrapped side walls. Inside, clean detailing lends class to economical materials such as birch plywood (at the walls and ceilings) and engineered-wood flooring. Projecting balconies offer outdoor access at each level, including the fourth, which tops out at exactly 35 feet. “The architect executed the owner’s wishes well,” concluded one judge. “This one works for me.”