322 Reinvented by Substance Architecture
Substance Architecture have completed a contemporary renovation on an Iowa City residence that was originally built in 1941.

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322 Reinvented by Substance Architecture
This Iowa City residence, built in 1941 and subsequently expanded several times over the intervening decades, was a complex mass housing a warren of rooms with no overall sense of organization. The home had one compelling feature – a large site in an established neighborhood surrounded by mature trees. The desire to liberate and organize the interior spaces and connect them to this landscape was a central theme which guided the homes renovation.
The designers employed a series of transformational tactics to simplify and expand the home. The gable form was expanded vertically (by increasing the roof slope) and extruded to the north to increase the homes volume within the existing foundation. The existing windows were replaced and their rhythm extended to order the home’s fenestration. The result is a simple, almost archetypal, “house shape”. This gabled volume was then expanded with a series of porches providing a transitional space between inside and outside, as well as solar protection for new enlarged glass openings. These porches, in turn, frame exterior spaces around the home.
The interior is similarly direct. The first level of the home becomes a single, white, open volume with a dark mass of service spaces placed off-center. This mass subtly defines the first level living spaces. The second level houses the bedrooms while the attic becomes a playroom space, flanked by additional bedrooms.
Throughout, efforts we made to create a cohesive whole with a sense of openness out of the cellular rooms of the existing home.
Visit the Substance Architecture website – here.
Photography by Paul Crosby
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Jimw on 21 Jul 2010 at 6:11 am #
A fabulous transformation! Taking a WWII garden variety “colonial” and completely reinterpreting it into an agraian-like vernacular expression so appropriate in the regional context. Composition, materiality, detail, etc. – wonderfully executed. One of the best entries I’ve seen posted here in a long while.
Chris on 21 Jul 2010 at 8:18 am #
Love this transformation. It’s sleek and modern, but not bland and sterile like many of the other contemporary houses. The color palette is fantastic!
BjZ on 21 Jul 2010 at 9:42 am #
I don’t know but there’s something about this house that captivates me, and quite frankly i’m attracted to it. The exterior isn’t all that but the interior makes up for it. I find the interior quite lovely.
I agree too that it is a fantastic transformation/remodelling piece of work.
James on 21 Jul 2010 at 1:41 pm #
Great. I can really see how the house works
TW on 21 Jul 2010 at 3:28 pm #
The exterior transformation is truly fantastic. It screams style and quality. Clearly good money was thrown at the project (zinc roof etc) and the architects have used it well.
But the interior is lacking somehow. I think it’s the blond timber floors that don’t sit well with the rest of the finishes and colours.
To do blonde timber you either need to do the whole scandinavian thing to perfection or you balance it with depth and texture in other materials/finishes. The lounge room almost makes it with it’s black wall, rust fireplace, black windows. But the other rooms don’t. The pink floor dominates and a floor should never dominate a room. I would have loved to have seen that warm entrance tile (at the base of stairs) throughout the house instead.
jwc3 on 21 Jul 2010 at 4:19 pm #
Nice to see a renovation featured on this site. I’m doing something similar to my house right now. Thanks.
anne on 21 Jul 2010 at 10:22 pm #
i don’t care for this ay all. something just isn’t right….? i’m not on the business but….. i don’t like the floors and the stairway railings indoor and out are horrible.
Mary on 21 Jul 2010 at 11:28 pm #
This caught my attention in a very positive way. It’s a shame more attention wasn’t paid to the floors. The light tiny stripes of wood look like left.-overs from the first house.
abt on 22 Jul 2010 at 1:24 am #
Interesting ideas, nice details! It leaves a warm feeling.
Smack on 22 Jul 2010 at 2:35 am #
On the whole I think this one works, there are certain things I would change but I could probably say that about any project (the kitchen worktop irritates me but that was probably a client choice). They seem to have gotten the basic principles right and I feel that the form and scale works well. Also the attention to detail in making every part of the building relate to others is impressive – the units in the playroom for example lining through with the rooflight. I would however hate to be the guy who has the job of changing the lightbulbs, they’ve definitely gone overboard there.
jwc3 on 22 Jul 2010 at 7:15 am #
I’ve noticed several negative comments about the wood floors in this house. As a professional photographer it appears to me that the real problem here is the photography, not the floors. There is a combination of incorrect color temperature, color balance, and tint that is creating a pink-ish tint to the floors. To the photographer that shot this house, next time use a grey card during exposure and then calibrate your colors in Lightroom post exposure.
Jus on 22 Jul 2010 at 9:29 am #
You can’t be serious. That’s the before picture? I agree with Smack in that everything here is not a win, but, at the expense of sounding emo, this is mostly beautiful. The lighting is definitely a plus. The exterior is just a vast improvement. The porch design was a good idea imo.
Anne Perretta on 22 Jul 2010 at 3:00 pm #
Unremarkable. Nice if you like “run of the mill” contemporary. there’s just no pizzaz to it. Give me my old 1925 bungalow with all the character!
curtis on 23 Jul 2010 at 10:44 am #
You guys must be crazy who don’t like this. There is so much to love about this and the attention to detail is just delightful. Look at how the cornice line of the porch is broken precisely to align with the columns below. The change in vertical textures on the fireplace aligns with the dark vertical texture of the kitchen cabinets which is on the opposite side of the room. Look at the transition from solid stairs at the lowest level to the elimination of the stair riser at the upper levels to allow natural light to filter down through the staircase…. There is SO much to love about this house. Sure, maybe if you’re profession is an interior designer, you can focus your criticism on the finishes, but as far as Architecture goes, this is a stunning piece of work.
Dano on 23 Jul 2010 at 11:08 pm #
The “farmhouse” of the 21st century. Good execution, simple lines, bright and open, but unobtrusive on the outside. It “blends” well with Iowa.
KnezPedja on 25 Jul 2010 at 7:44 am #
Just big WOW…
Great