This black-clad addition to an existing Long Island house includes a second-floor painting studio, powder room, and garage that doubles as an exhibition space when not populated by a 1966 Chevy Impala.
A beachside home for a family with children draws from the honest expression of structure that characterized California’s mid-century modern architecture.
With its slatted cedar facade and furnished roof deck, Harbor Hideaway acts as a lookout tower within a small peninsular neighborhood in the Long Island village of Sag Harbor.
For this tranquil forest refuge, the architects worked from the inside out—configuring the house’s interiors according to views of nature, with the exterior form following suit.
Surrounded by suburban development, the vertically oriented Austin home peaks above the tree canopy from within a ravine that had long been written off as unbuildable.