The Bluff House by Bruns Architecture
Bruns Architecture have designed the Bluff House in Baraboo, Wisconsin.
Full description after the photos….













The Bluff House by Bruns Architecture
Designed to provide the owners with a quiet retreat amidst the unglaciated Wisconsin landscape, Bluff House rises from the gently sloping terrain of its wooded site along the crown of a 30-mile long bluff range. A former logging road carves through the rhythmic woodland providing access to the house. As the home’s intersecting volumes slowly emerge from the dense forest, visitors are welcomed by the legibility of simple, diagrammatic geometry and the rustic warmth of natural materials.
Early studies of the region’s geology inspired the two concrete organizing walls of the home which prove to be as strong and distinct as the metamorphic quartzite composition of the bluffs that have resisted erosion from weathering, rivers and glaciers over the past 350 million years. Growing out of the staggered solid walls are lighter assemblies of solid cedar sided panels and glazing. The fenestration patterns offer a variety of vistas from, and often through, the house, echoing the varied sight lines that one experiences when walking through the forested bluff. The windows alternate between full height vertical apertures and horizontal clerestories, but always follow the precise 59” structural cadence of the building’s reclaimed timber beams.
The first concrete wall separates residents entering through the garage and guests entering though the solid wood entry door. The separate entry sequences are rejoined at the entry foyer where the concrete mass extends into the interior space. Once inside, a circulation gallery invites you into the main living hall, or alternately down to the mechanical and storage walk-out level. The open plan of the public volume includes kitchen, dining and living space and opens up to extended views of the forested bluff the house literally and figuratively grows out of.
The building’s envelope is composed of super insulated polyurethane SIP wall and roof panels and high performing low-e coated argon filled glazing. The 1,490 sf of finished main level is heated with a hydronic radiant heat system that uses the mass of the lower level slab to maintain a comfortable environment. The heat stored in the slab naturally radiates up through slots, directing warm air past the main level glazing and is returned through the open stair, completing the convection cycle. Outside air is filtered through a heat recovery ventilator, bringing fresh air into the home without sacrificing thermal performance.
Visit the Bruns Architecture website – here.
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F-J on 19 Jan 2010 at 2:18 am #
Gorgeous.
The wall of wood, my fav.!
Patrick on 19 Jan 2010 at 7:49 am #
My favorite our these homes on acreage. It could do with out all that concrete though. Or a lower elevation so not too much concrete is showing. I mean youre in the middle of the woods, my preference would be to blend into the surrounding forest.
Now urban environments are a different story.
graham on 19 Jan 2010 at 7:00 pm #
the concrete pedestal would more than likely be there for fire regulations plus the heat retention/heating as per the explanation in the technical section
Oliver on 19 Jan 2010 at 10:49 pm #
the woodwork is great … good job
Hisham on 20 Jan 2010 at 12:20 am #
Very nice…it gives you a feeling about Frank Lloyd Wright’s works.
Bill on 20 Jan 2010 at 8:45 am #
I’d like a lot more windows. Looks like a lot of tunnels…..
Andy on 22 Jan 2010 at 9:34 am #
Definitely a FLW feeling to the house, the one shot especially looks like the Boat House in Buffalo that they built from Wright’s designs in 2007.
Dano on 25 Feb 2010 at 11:52 pm #
what’s with such a narrow long house? feels like it could have been just a hair wider and exuded a great deal more openness.