Gallery House / John Wingfelder Architect
Sitting among the conventional neighboring houses on the street, the public front of the Gallery House presents its original architectural identity but distinguishes itself with a modern landscape design.
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Sitting among the conventional neighboring houses on the street, the public front of the Gallery House presents its original architectural identity but distinguishes itself with a modern landscape design.
A single row of old semi-detached family houses remained surrounded by concrete blocks of flats, creating an exceptional private island of gardens inside a high-rise residential area of the Pilsen–Lochotín district.
Nestled in a clearing, the Kojima House has unobstructed views of San Francisco Bay to the east, the valley of Kent-Woodlands to the south and the mountains to the west.
Through a series of architectural interventions, we shifted and reconfigured spaces for more casual patterns of living.
Nestled at the foot of the iconic Twin Peaks’ Sutro Tower this Midtown Terrace home is part of a 1950’s development featuring rows of mid-century modern-style homes, many of which share identical designs up and down these hilly San Francisco blocks.
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Consisting of two interconnected structures — a fully renovated barn and one-storey addition — Grange House is a poetic and pragmatic architectural composition that celebrates wood construction and the agricultural vernacular of Southern Ontario’s bucolic countryside.
The House of Love is part of a row housing complex consisting of four attached homes with shared walls—almost like a box caged on all sides, desperately seeking light and space.