Pringle Falls House / Eric Meglasson Architect
Nestled in a grove of ponderosa pine trees on a gently sloping hillside, the Pringle Falls House looks out over rolling landscape at seven peaks of the Cascade Mountains in the distance.
Nestled in a grove of ponderosa pine trees on a gently sloping hillside, the Pringle Falls House looks out over rolling landscape at seven peaks of the Cascade Mountains in the distance.
The Greenbelt Overlook Residence is a home for a family of three overlooking the greenbelt in Austin, Texas. At once serious and playful, this project embodies the competing influences guiding our client team.
When our clients purchased this peninsula property, it had an existing barn that required demolition. Within its somewhat constrained footprint, our clients built a new 4-bedroom home that required a mix of clever design solutions to accommodate guest rooms and plenty of entertainment space.
Twenty years ago, Whitten Architects designed a home for a family on a 100-acre coastal farm in the town of Yarmouth. In 2017, we returned to the site to design a cottage for the next generation of the same family.
Les Rorquals Residence has a rustic look. Its architecture is more rural than modernist, closer to the earth than to the sky. It hugs the profile of the terrain. The exterior volumetry is abstract and intriguing.
The Estacada House project was a complete remodel of a beautiful, but sadly run-down country house on a 250 acre estate. The property, which cascades down from the house, first to a beautiful pool and then to a river and forest, reputedly has the best salmon fishing in the state.
JUMA Architects beautifully integrated the entrance door and converted the connecting volume between the two wings of the house into a symmetrical whole, with solid wooden beams that support the new awning.
Dark grey stone, mahogany, detailed topography and the surrounding vegetation are combined to make LS House feel like it is part of nature. This project, set in Valle de Bravo, 180 kilometers from Mexico City, is a rustic residential proposal and at the same time a modern construction of purified lines.
A San Francisco family of four asked us to create a retreat from their urban lifestyle, reusing the footprint of an existing 1950s ranch house in Glen Ellen, California, while building in a consistent way with the area’s rolling hills and agricultural structures.
The night area is oriented on the opposite wing of the Mallorca house, where the atmosphere is quieter. Each room was created and designed in accordance with the owners’ premises and equipped with comfortable and ergonomic elements.
The Inverness A- frame and surrounding property are the ideal locale for an intimate celebration, writer’s retreats, creative workshops, adventuring, or reading by the fire.
This new infill project is tucked between two houses from very different eras. On the left is an original house from the early 1900’s, where one of the clients grew up. On the right is a 1980’s version of the same kind of house.