Architects Michael Manfredi and Marion Weiss, partners at New York firm Weiss/Manfredi, have long been merging landscape and structure in their work, including the Olympic Sculpture Park in Seattle (2007) and the visitor center at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden (2012). In these projects, the architecture becomes part of the site and the site part of the architecture, so that it is hard to tell where one ends and the other begins.
Additional Information:Video
People/Products
Now they have explored this theme in their first ground-up residential project, a rustic but modern house in Tuxedo Park, New York, about 40 miles northwest of Manhattan. Established in the 1880s as a private hunting and fishing reserve, the village was a popular retreat for New York’s elite through the 1920s, with many stately houses designed by prominent late-19th- and early-20th-century architects, including Bruce Price, McKim, Mead & White, and John Russell Pope. Tuxedo Park (which gave the name to the gentleman’s formal attire) is also noted for its distinctive craggy landscape, with dense woods and winding roads.
For more than three decades, Joseph McCann, a PepsiCo executive, and his wife, Anne, a graphic artist and passionate gardener, spent their weekends in a Tuxedo Park carriage house, which Manfredi and Weiss renovated for them in the late 1980s. But the McCanns, now retired, wanted a house comfortable for more extended periods, with room for guests, and conveniences such as air-conditioning. So they bought the adjacent three-acre lot and again turned to Manfredi and Weiss.
The new site is steeply sloped, with two enormous rock outcroppings, and—when the trees drop their leaves—stunning views of Tuxedo Lake. There was already a house there—a dilapidated 1960s structure, which the architects describe as a “faux ski lodge” that seemed “dropped onto the site rather than of it.” Not surprisingly, the clients had something entirely different in mind that would be contemporary and “right next to nature,” explains Joe.
The architects proposed replacing the existing house with a series of retaining walls made of local fieldstone. These ashlar walls would appear to march up the terrain, outlining a serpentine approach. They would also define the house’s lower two levels, which were to be built entirely within the footprint of the existing foundations, enclosing a guest bedroom and library, among other spaces. A steel-and-woodframed third level, mostly invisible from the road except for a clerestory and a portion of overhanging roof, would sit behind the house’s primary stone facade. This top floor—to contain the living room, dining area, kitchen, and the master bedroom—was to curve in sync with the contours of the giant boulders. It would include a long window wall facing east, overlooking a terraced garden.
Before construction could begin, the scheme needed the go-ahead from the local architectural review board. The process took more than a year, but Manfredi and Weiss finally convinced the board that, though their design did not hew to the favored Tudor, Georgian, or Shingle styles, it was in keeping with Tuxedo Park’s character.
As with the turn-of-the-century villas and cottages, their design took its cues from the surrounding landscape, its stone walls similar to those found along the village’s roads and on many of its historic houses. In addition to “metering the topography,” said the architects, the walls would help control water runoff from the steep slopes of the site.
In the finished house, this relationship with the terrain is most apparent on the top level, reached via a stair with a glass balustrade or by elevator. It reads as one long, curvilinear open space, sheltered under a seemingly floating king-post-truss-supported roof. The more private areas—the kitchen, bath, and master bedroom—are lined up, hidden behind an origami-like drywall partition that stops a few inches short of the bottom chord of the roof truss.
But the living and dining spaces flow into each other, with their polished concrete floors stepping up a few risers between them. This change in elevation matches that of the adjacent terraced garden, seen and easily accessed through sets of double glass doors integrated into the arced steel-framed eastern window wall. The more solid, west-facing exterior wall has a clerestory, which helps reinforce the impression that the roof is floating, and also contains small windows that offer framed vistas over the McCanns’ carriage-house property. These strategies, which put the focus on the outside, are so effective that when you are on the top floor, the rest of the almost 5,000- square-foot house all but disappears, making this level seem like a small pavilion in the landscape.
The McCanns are helping to fuse the site and structure by building a narrow pathway into the slope behind the house that echoes the terraces of the garden below. They have also planted nearly 50 trees, including oaks and Eastern white pines, and are experimenting with shrubs and ground covers such as heather, thyme, and witch hazel. They want, says Joe, “something that looks natural but is also artful.” Those words could describe the house as well, which skillfully merges with the landscape to create what the architects like to call a “habitable topography.”
PeopleArchitect: Weiss/Manfredi Architecture / Landscape / Urbanism 200 Hudson St 10th Floor New York Ny 10013 T 212 760 9002 F 212 760 9003 Info@Weissmanfredi.Com
Personnel in architect's firm who should receive special credit: Marion Weiss, FAIA, Design Partner Michael A. Manfredi, FAIA, Design Partner Michael Blasberg, RA, Project Architect Lee Lim, Project Architect Hamilton Hadden, RA, Project Architect
Architect Consultant Michael DeCandia Architects 130 West 29th Street, 12th Floor New York, NY 10001 T: 914-232-8210 (Katonah) F: 914-232-2633 (Katonah) Michael DeCandia, Principal John Cuniffe, Project Architect
Civil Engineer Thomas W. Skrable, PE 65 Ramapo Valley Rd, suite 13 Mahwah, NJ 07430 T: 201-529-5010 F: 201-701-0312 M: 201-240-5390 E: tskrable@optonline.net
Lighting Consultant Brandston Partnership Inc. 302 Fifth Avenue, 12th Floor New York, NY 10001 T: 212-924-4050 Chou Lien, Partner
Structural (Roof) Consultant Weidlinger Associates Inc. Consulting Engineers 40 Wall Street, 19th Floor New York, NY 10005-1304 Phone: 212-367-3000 Tian-Fang Jing E: jing@wai.com
Structural Consultant Cowley Engineering, P.C. 4093 Jockey Street Charlton, NY 12019 T: 914-643-6242
General contractor Longeri Construction Corp 14 Jacksonville Rd Towaco, NJ 07082 T: 973-335-5141 F: 973-335-5142 M: 201-481-4005
Photographers Albert Večerka/Esto, Jeff Goldberg
Client: Joseph and Anne McCann
Size: 4,800 square feet
Cost: withheld
Completion date: 2014 |
ProductsStructural system Roof: Composite Steel and Glulam Truss on Steel Columns Wall: Concrete Bearing Exterior Wall Floor: Concrete Slab on grade (basement), Wood Flooring on Engineered Wood Joists (1st Floor), Concrete Slab on Steel Deck (2nd floor)
Exterior cladding Stonework Supplier Fieldstone provided by: Legacy Stoneworks, Inc PO Box 832 Tuxedo Park, NY 10987 T: 845-351-2480 F: 845-351-2499
Metal-Frame Windows Hope’s Windows 84 Hopkins Avenue Jamestown, NY 14702 T: 716-665-5124
Hardware Locksets and Hinges: Schalge, Rixon, Rockwood Pulls: Custom Pull by Veyko Design
Metal Fabricator Perforated Bronze Screens and Exterior Gates by Veyko Design 216 Falmouth Avenue Philadelphia, PA 19123 T: 215-928-1349
Lighting Interior lighting: Lightolier Lighting 20 Englewood Ave Staten Island, NY 10309 T: 718-608-2900
Bega 1000 Bega Way Carpinteria, CA 93013 T: 805-684-0533
Lightology 215 W Chicago Ave Chicago, IL 60654 T: 312-944-1000
RAB Lighting 535 West 24th Street York, NY 10011 T: 201-784-8600
Exterior lighting: Stonco Lighting 2345 Vauxhall Rd Union, NJ 07083 T: 908-964-7000
Conveyance Elevators/Escalators: Handi-Lift, Inc 20 Englewood Ave Staten Island, NY 10309 T: 201-933-0111
Plumbing Kohler, Dornbracht, Elkay, Agape, Miele, Toto |