Excerpt: Owyang House by Swatt Miers Architects features carefully designed landscape paths, gardens, and interior spaces with abundant natural light. The interiors of the house are aligned with its exteriors, with glass walls connecting to beautiful gardens. The ground floor level includes all of the ‘public’ spaces while the upper level includes an office and guest bedrooms in two wings connected by a floating bridge.
Project Description
[Text as submitted by architect] The Owyang House was designed for a family who had owned the previous home on the site for many years. The previous residence was a low, one-story structure, with post and beam construction that precluded adding a second story.
The new home by Swatt Miers Architects is two stories, with a full basement, and includes 6,000 square feet of habitable space. Accessed through new and carefully choreographed landscape paths and gardens, the new interior spaces feature exciting spaces and an abundance of natural light.
The visitor approaches the home from the north side of the property by a pathway that is flanked on the east side by a long, linear infinity-edge water feature that terminates at the front door. A long, low steel canopy at the entrance walk compresses the exterior entrance space and connects it to the low ceiling of the entrance gallery.
On an axis with the entrance, the dining and living ‘great room’ features walls of glass that connect the interior spaces to the beautiful new gardens. A free standing, steel framed stair is treated like a work of functional sculpture, hovering above an interior garden of gravel and a single boulder.
The ground floor level includes all of the ‘public’ spaces – kitchen, family, dining and living spaces – and the primary suite. The upper level includes an office and guest bedrooms in two wings connected by a floating bridge with north-facing clerestory windows above.