Originally published January 15, 2011 at 7:03 PM | Page modified January 24, 2011 at 9:59 AM
Northwest Living
Contemporary on the West Coast, Victorian on the East Coast
A family happily slips back and forth from a home filled with beloved Victorian clutter to a spare modern getaway place on the Olympic Peninsula designed by Bohlin Cywinski Jackson.
BENJAMIN BENSCHNEIDER/THE SEATTLE TIMES
A family room just off the kitchen offers walls of glass that look out to a deer-magnet meadow. The cistern harvests rainwater for irrigation. The home also features radiant heat, reclaimed wood, natural ventilation and sun shading. It was named Green Home Project of the Year by habitation Design Magazine. Randy Allworth of Allworth Design was the landscape architect.
BENJAMIN BENSCHNEIDER/THE SEATTLE TIMES
The barn wood breaks in, meeting the interior cherry - materials rustic and materials refined used to reduce scale and define volumes. The bedrooms and bath are behind hidden doors in the cherry wall.
BENJAMIN BENSCHNEIDER/THE SEATTLE TIMES
"You go through the fence, lo and behold there's that view of the sea. It's all about revealing things and the nature of things," says architect Peter Bohlin of the entrance breezeway. The design team included David Guthrie, project manager; Robert Miller, principal in charge; Amy Williams, project architect. Crocker Construction built the home; All Save Construction and Management was the primary subcontractor.
BENJAMIN BENSCHNEIDER/THE SEATTLE TIMES
The two-story living room is open to heaven, earth and sea and the Strait of Juan de Fuca. "Doing buildings, I think, is a bit of choreography," says Bohlin. "It's about how people find their way. You titillate. It's a discovery from beginning to end. We are at the nexus of people and places and site and how we make them. They are all intermingled. But people are the most important."
BENJAMIN BENSCHNEIDER/THE SEATTLE TIMES
The home, made of concrete, reclaimed barn wood, Parklex and Corten steel, features three bedrooms downstairs, seen in the contemporary bay windows, angled toward the Olympic Mountains to expand the view in each room. Upstairs holds another bedroom and office. The project was completed in September 2009.
BENJAMIN BENSCHNEIDER/THE SEATTLE TIMES
The open living spaces are defined by the dropped ceilings in the kitchen and dining areas, while the living room is open to the roof.
BENJAMIN BENSCHNEIDER/THE SEATTLE TIMES
For a family of professional cooks, the kitchen has a pantry that, with glass doors, is every bit as beautiful as the exposed kitchen cabinetry. It also features a big farm sink and a Wolf range.
BENJAMIN BENSCHNEIDER/THE SEATTLE TIMES
Brazilian cherry indoors, here seen in the dining room, adds comfort and warmth to the contemporary design. "The dining is under a loft, and therefore the scale is kept purposely more intimate," Bohlin says.
BENJAMIN BENSCHNEIDER/THE SEATTLE TIMES
The upstairs office features a built-in desk and windows 4 feet from the floor, offering views for those seated there. To get these and other items the family wanted, Bohlin "had us write a memo to him," Steve says. "Who we were; who our kids were; what we liked/didn't; pictures of our house; 15 pages!"
RUBY-RED poppies wave enthusiastically; along the driveway, from the meadow, outside the door. Maybe it's just the wind. But it feels more like the spirit of the place that sits on a bluff over the water at the end of a winding, dirt road in Port Townsend.
"It's an entertaining house," says Barbara, which is to say this cabin in contemporary dress holds a crowd and sleeps 10.
"Don't you hate it when you're cooking and people pants you?" This comes from the kitchen and, yes, I do. That would be the family: sisters cutting herbs, tearing flowers for supper. A deer takes an evening meal just outside the long kitchen window.
"The first thing you said is, 'We want you to build a kitchen and a house around it,' " says daughter Rebecca, a recent Culinary Institute of America graduate among this family of foodies. She is remembering, with her father, Steve, how it all started. How this Philadelphia family, which lives in a historically significant Queen Anne Victorian, came to build, clear across the country, a cool contemporary of high design and simple pleasures by Peter Bohlin of Bohlin Cywinski Jackson.
Briefly it goes like this: They came to visit family in Port Townsend. Hooked.
But that was back in the land-rush days of 2005. Steve bought the land unseen and in a bidoff: "The Realtor called and said, 'This is it. It's the best lot I've seen on the Olympic Peninsula in two years."
Suddenly he needed an architect. Bohlin Cywinski Jackson appealed because the firm has offices in both Seattle and Philadelphia.
"I had no idea who he was," Steve says of Peter, the Bohlin in BCJ, which was chosen as the national AIA's firm of the year in 1994. "I called the office and the guy said, 'Mr. Bohlin will call you back.' I said, 'Oh no, no. I don't need the top guy. This is just a house. And he said to me, 'Mr. Bohlin. Returns all calls. About homes.' "
Homes are very intriguing to Peter Bohlin. And this one won a 2010 national AIA Housing Award, "created to recognize the best in housing design and promote the importance of good housing as a necessity of life, a sanctuary for the human spirit and a valuable national resource." It also recently received one of four merit awards at AIA Seattle's 2010 Honor Awards.
"I told him, 'Peter, you don't have to worry about me as a client, because I'm a lawyer. I bill by the hour.' And he said to me, 'Steve Jobs can be difficult. Bill Gates can be difficult. You I'm not worried about.' "
"Then I knew it was going to be OK," Steve says, laughing.
It sure is.
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The 2,800-square-foot house, sustainable where possible, was designed to honor views grand (water, mountains) and intimate (meadow, forest). The breezeway is a dramatic frame for the water beyond, and also a stage for Bohlin-designed discoveries to come.
Exposed steel structure and wood columns extend the length of the slender building. Primary spaces turn to views of the Strait of Juan de Fuca. Angled bedroom window bays turn to the Olympic Mountains. The lower volume is clad in reclaimed barn wood, openings there framing forest and meadow. Barn wood breaks in, meeting up with interior cherry — rustic meets refined. A silver water-harvesting cistern sits out for all to see. Nods to farmsteads past in a building Bohlin sees as agrarian.
"People who knew us knew we had this huge Victorian house filled with Victorian furniture," Steve says. "They didn't get this. But we said, 'You don't understand, both houses are architecturally significant.' "
Rebecca Teagarden is assistant editor of Pacific Northwest magazine. Benjamin Benschneider is a magazine staff photographer.
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