Barcode House by David Jameson Architect
David Jameson Architect have completed the Barcode House in Washington, D.C.

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Description from the architects:
Barcode House explores juxtapositions between the heavy and light and the old and the new. The work is formed by positioning the project’s diverse pressures into a unique situational aesthetic. Brittle masonry walls of the existing Washington, DC row house governed that the addition be engineered as a freestanding structure. Site constraints dictated a vertically oriented spatial solution.
The client’s desire for transparent living space generated the opportunity to create an integrated solution for lateral force requirements. Structural steel rods within a glass window wall are aligned with datum lines of the neighboring building elevations. A stucco circulation tower anchors the living space to the existing row house.
Visit the David Jameson Architect website – here.
Photography by Paul Warchol
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Graham Roebeck on 07 Aug 2011 at 6:22 pm #
Wow, great spatial solution, elegantly resolved.
My only peeve is the transparency required in the brief. Those little rods prevent the neighbours from seeing if there are any bones in the fish dinner…
JOYCE FLETCHER on 07 Aug 2011 at 7:01 pm #
ASTONISHING! YOU HAVE TO LIKE YOUR NEIGHBORS TO LIVE IN THIS HOUSE… MINE IS OPEN TOO, BUT I LIVE IN THE DEEP WOODS…
I?A on 07 Aug 2011 at 7:15 pm #
Adorable design but how practical will be the process of cleaning windows.
Shayan on 08 Aug 2011 at 2:53 am #
You know the feeling when you fell in love!!? I just loved it.
zach on 08 Aug 2011 at 8:26 am #
curious to see this house with leaves on the trees…much different experience i would imagine. hope the glass is well insulated….imagine the heating and cooling costs….ouch.
Dave on 10 Aug 2011 at 9:29 am #
Can you tell me where you found the outdoor dining table and chairs?
ron on 15 Aug 2011 at 6:22 am #
dave,
the outdoor furniture is by Richard Schultz. you can find it here:
http://www.richardschultz.com