This house in Dutchess County, NY, emerges from a clearing in a forest, 200 feet way from the shoreline of a beautiful lake. Entirely constructed with cross-laminated-timber (CLT), walls, floor, and roof were assembled quickly on-site, using mass-timber panels milled in a factory, as well as prefabricated concrete foundations. This renewable wood building material is beautiful, ecological, and solid, providing a warm and natural feeling throughout the house.
On the exterior, the house is clad with waney board (live edge) cedar siding. Inside the house, the natural finish of the timber panels is expressed on all visible walls and ceilings. The house derives the majority of is energy from geothermal wells and photovoltaic panels.
Living spaces are connected in a fluid loop around a central core in the middle of the three-bedroom house, anchored by double-height and skylit spaces at the house’s four corners. All spaces face outwards to the clearing and forest, through large glazed openings. One small triangular window is placed under the stair – perhaps the future favorite place of the family dog.
See article in New York Times here.
Double height voids at the four corners are occupied in different ways.
The ground floor opens up to a continuous, 360° view of the surrounding forest.
Colorful metal elements complement a predominant use of exposed CLT surfaces.
Client: Private Client
Location: Dutchess County, NY
Status: Completed
Dates: 2020 – 2023
Design Team: Eric Bunge, Mimi Hoang | Paul Mok, Isabel Sarasa | Amanda Morgan, Jason Kim, Julio Picatoste | Cole Van der Feldt
Consultant Team: Structure: SILMAN | MEP: OLA | Civil: Depuy Engineering
Builder: UCE Fine Builders