rural Washington State, United States
Pb Elemental Architecture
Post By:Kitticoon Poopong
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Photo © Courtesy of Pb Elemental Architecture |
The River Bend residence sits at the base of the
Cascades in a heavily forested site on the bank of the
Snoqualmie River. The home balances the client’s desire for privacy, while embracing nature.
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Photo © Courtesy of Pb Elemental Architecture |
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Photo © Courtesy of Pb Elemental Architecture |
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Photo © Courtesy of Pb Elemental Architecture |
Many challenges faced the design and construction of this home, low budget, sustainable desires, but most of all schedule. The client, a young family of four, located the site two weeks before legislation would change setbacks and make the site unbuildable. The challenge was to design and submit a sustainable home that would accommodate their existing family and could later be added on to as their family grew, before the change in legislation.
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Photo © Courtesy of Pb Elemental Architecture |
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Photo © Courtesy of Pb Elemental Architecture |
The second challenge was accommodating the existing setbacks, protected old growth trees, septic drain fields, and the buildings proposed/future footprint. A seemingly simple bar diagram formulated the initial concept, living/entertaining on the ground floor, private bedrooms on the upper floor. In the future as the clients family grow a third bar was designed to bridge over the living room.
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Photo © Courtesy of Pb Elemental Architecture |
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Photo © Courtesy of Pb Elemental Architecture |
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Photo © Courtesy of Pb Elemental Architecture |
Conceived as three masses (private, living, utilitarian) and three materials (wood, concrete/ metal), the River Bend Residence offers a low mantainence exterior and naturally light interior. The river can be heard from the 2400 sqft of exterior decks, while viewed from the upper deck. The forest surrounding the home was maintained to ensure wildlife habitat and reduce the homes impact on the site. Wild grasses and local plants were installed in areas affected by construction. The home features a Geothermal in-ground heat loop and Desuperheater for free water heating during cooling season and reduced energy usage during heating seasons.
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Photo © Courtesy of Pb Elemental Architecture |
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Photo © Courtesy of Pb Elemental Architecture |
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Photo © Courtesy of Pb Elemental Architecture |
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Photo © Courtesy of Pb Elemental Architecture |
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Photo © Courtesy of Pb Elemental Architecture |
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Photo © Courtesy of Pb Elemental Architecture |
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Photo © Courtesy of Pb Elemental Architecture |
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Photo © Courtesy of Pb Elemental Architecture |
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Photo © Courtesy of Pb Elemental Architecture |
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Photo © Courtesy of Pb Elemental Architecture |
The people
Architects: Pb Elemental Architecture
Location: rural Washington State, United States
Photographs: Courtesy of Pb Elemental Architecture