Mountain Tree House

Project Description

The Mountain House was built five years prior. It is an inside-outside place. Half screened porch and outdoor courtyards, half inside house and glass walls. Set for gardening and reading, it is a weekend retreat into the vertical poplar trunks among the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains.

But now the family has grown with grandchildren and friends, and a little more space is needed for things like tractors and dogs. The new project is a concrete garage, a steel bedroom and a bamboo deck. It, too, is an inside-outside thing, but also an up-down and heavy-light thing.

The garage is for working and gardening, the storage of tools and the occasional car. It is walled by unfinished concrete, with plain doors and long windows. The bedroom above is cantilevered over the work-yard, as open with glass walls as the garage is closed below. The little bathroom is solid, clad in steel. The walls swing wide open for outdoor showers and spring cleaning. The bamboo starts in planters on the ground and grows up through narrow slots in the deck above. The space is for sitting and viewing, in and among the fast growing canes.

The structure is wood and steel framing atop reinforced concrete walls. Deck surface and interior flooring is black slate. The ramp and handrails are self-weathering steel. Panels of the same steel, lap-jointed and welded, clad the upper room. Glass walls are either clear tempered or translucent laminated.

Images

Drawings

Process

Project Information

project: a guest house, garage and bamboo deck addition to previously designed house
location: Dillard, Georgia
completion date: summer 2001
building area: 1,000 square feet enclosed; 1,000 square foot open deck
construction cost: not available

Awards

  • 2005 National AIA Honor Award of Excellence
  • 2003 South Atlantic Region AIA Honor Award
  • 2003 Architectural Record Houses Award

Bibliography