The Ferrous House by Johnsen Schmaling Architects
Johnsen Schmaling Architects have recently received a 2009 Small Project Award from the American Institute of Architects for their work on the Ferrous House in Spring Prairie, Wisconsin.
The Ferrous House demonstrates how an obsolete suburban dwelling can be reinvented, both spatially and aesthetically, to accommodate today’s lifestyles. For budgetary reasons, the house reuses the foundation, plumbing cores and main perimeter walls of a dilapidated 1970s structure. The main house volume is wrapped on three sides with a rain screen of weathering steel panels, protecting the inside of the house from the scrutiny of curious neighbors and the elements; in the back, it extends beyond the building’s perimeter, where it shelters the sides of a linear south-facing patio.
Visit the website of Johnsen Schmaling Architects – here.

















Photography by Doug Edmunds
The Ferrous House sits in a row of unexceptional 1970’s ranches, part of a narrow subdivision hugging the edge of a wooded nature preserve west of Milwaukee. An existing dwelling that had fallen into serious disrepair was entirely gutted and stripped of its roof, but the limited construction budget required the reuse of the existing foundation, main perimeter walls, and plumbing cores.
The main level of the house, a simple rectangular volume with 1,380 sf of living space, is wrapped on three sides with a suspended curtain of weathering steel panels, their warm color of ferrous corrosion echoing the hues of the derelict farm equipment left behind on the area’s abandoned pastures. The steel wrapper protects the inside of the house from the scrutiny of suspicious neighbors and the elements; in the back, it extends beyond the building’s perimeter, where it shelters the sides of a linear south-facing patio.
Linear storage boxes, containing built-in closet systems and living room cabinetry, penetrate the steel curtain and cantilever over the edge of the building, adding desperately needed square footage without altering the original footprint of the house.
In a carefully choreographed entry sequence, wide exterior stairs run along the front of the house and lead into a glazed foyer, an extension of the main circulation core that transforms into a small observatory above the roof. The slightly tilted roof plane is supported by a filigree of exposed metal and wood trusses, adding height to the living spaces and allowing northern light to wash the inside of the house through a translucent, Nanogel-filled glass band. At night, the window band radiates its warm light into the distance, subtly evoking the iconic clerestory glow of the dairy barns that once dotted the region.
The Ferrous House offers a resource-conscious solution to the challenges of an aging, and often ill-conceived, suburban housing stock. In contrast to a radical tabula rasa approach, the project demonstrates how the bones of an obsolete building can be utilized and transformed into the framework for a contemporary dwelling.
Visit the website of Johnsen Schmaling Architects – here.

stephen on 03 Jun 2009 at 8:33 am #
i like it – it’s cute
Harold on 03 Jun 2009 at 9:45 am #
I love this, I feel it is true to the original style in the right ways, but utterly contemporary at the same time.
Derek on 03 Jun 2009 at 1:41 pm #
This is absolutely beautiful! I like seeing some industrial design concepts applied to country homes.
Tom on 03 Jun 2009 at 5:14 pm #
This is gorgeous, I love it… I especially like that there are pictures from all the seasons!
Architecture Magazine on 05 Jun 2009 at 2:55 am #
I like this house. The location is perfect choice. You enjoy the winter with a glass of wine before the fireplace or cool summer on the porch.
sg on 07 Jun 2009 at 5:42 am #
keep up the good work fellas!
jeffrey on 13 Jun 2009 at 7:28 am #
love the siting, love the use of materials and the volumes within the house, but the actual spaces themselves feel very un-lived in, very sterile almost which is surpising
L.A. on 11 Mar 2010 at 7:33 am #
HATE it….this house looks like a cold, sterile office building in a corporate jungle. It’s definitely not a warm, relaxing home. Gadz, I would fell like I had NEVER left work at the end of the day!