subscribe
free e-newsletter
contact us
advertise
Subscribe to Architectural Record
and save 60% off the newsstand price
print this article   |    e-mail this article    |   comment     

Ranch House

Carlton Washington
DORA

A cantilever stores water for drought-inflicted site

By John Gendall

This design for a house on a Washington state ranch by Peter Macapia, the principal of Brooklyn-based Design Office for Research and Achitecture (DORA), applies his interest in the relationship of formal geometries and energy relations. 

Ranch House
Photo © DORA

Rate this project:
Based on what you have seen and read about this project, how would you grade it? Use the stars below to indicate your assessment, five stars being the highest rating.
----- Advertising -----

Despite heavy snowfall during the cold winter, a quick evaporation in the long, hot summers leads to drought conditions.  This house is predicated on integrating with its site in order to make the snowfall’s moisture last throughout the summer.  

The house cantilevers from the sloped site, extending materially and ecologically from the landscape. A gradient of mixed rock aggregate approaches the house and begins to filter water before it reaches the folded double shell plenum envelope of the building.  The aluminum and fiberglass roof and envelope act as a filter and water catchment system that deposits water into tanks underneath the house’s volume.

Those tanks not only store water, but also act as an evaporative cooling system during the summer, and a thermal modifier in the winter as the temperature of the water offsets the cooling in the house.  They are spread large at the top to distribute the convection evenly. 

The project is indefinitely suspended.

Formal name of project: Ranch House

Location: Carlton Washington

Total construction cost: estimated $80,000.

Owner: Texas Creek Ranch,Inc.

Gross square footage: 1,500 sq. ft. 

Architect:
Peter Macapia
Design Office for Research and Architecture (DORA)
155 Remsen, no. 1
Brooklyn NY 11201
T: 646 309 2575
www.labdora.com

Reader Comments:

Submit a Photo
----- Advertising -----
Off the Record: Recent Blog Posts
The blog written by the staff of Architectural Record
View all blog posts >> Sponsored by:
Alpolic Materials
Reader Commented / Recommended
Most Commented Most Recommended
Rankings reflect comments made in the past 14 days
Rankings reflect votes made in the past 14 days
Find building materials in Sweets
McGrawHill
Search

© 2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved