Carpinteria Foothills Residence by Neumann Mendro Andrulaitis
Neumann Mendro Andrulaitis Architects designed this residence in Carpinteria, California.
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This contemporary residence is designed to seamlessly open unto the panoramic coastal ridge-top site via expansive operable glazed walls. The glazed transparency is balanced and the home is anchored in place by substantial cut native sandstone walls. The architectural design evolved from our client’s desire for a home that is a tranquil place for living, art and retreat.
The project site is located on a ridge in the foothills of Carpinteria, ten miles down the coast from Santa Barbara. The program asked for a master suite, one guest room, a study for two, a more contained den and an informal open living space they could share with their children and grand children. The site strategy was to separate the guesthouse, pool and pool house from the main house, by locating them amongst the oaks on a lower terrace. The smaller structures were easier to place around the mature oak trees without disturbing their root systems. Each structure has its own orientation and privacy.
How to develop a strategy with dramatic 360-degree views was a challenge for laying out the main house. Placing the main living space and study further away from the edge was determined to be quieter from the distant freeway noise. A courtyard created an inward oriented counterpoint to the distant vistas. A flat roof modernist scheme complemented the couples taste for modern art and furniture. Designers in their own right, they were the driving force in the overall design team. The design was limited to a simple palette of materials and forms. A European window and sliding door system was used to minimize the frames and optimize the glass. These glass walls were framed between large stonewalls constructed of the local Santa Barbara Sandstone, and volumes contained in plaster walls with an integral color (pantry, guest room, master bath and closet, storage area). The flat roofs were supported by steel columns separated from the curtain walls.
The landscape design became a hobby of the owner who studied local native plantings that were both fire resistant and drought tolerant. Some large oak trees were brought in to augment the existing oak grove, further nestle the house into the site, and create a foreground to help frame the spectacular views.
Visit the Neumann Mendro Andrulaitis Architects website – here.
Photography by Ciro Coelho
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Luís Loureiro on 22 Dec 2011 at 6:43 pm #
Are you sure that this house is from Neumann? i’m pretty sure that house is from Koenig , “the stahl house”.
Adam on 22 Dec 2011 at 8:20 pm #
Wow, really gorgeous. Generally this style of house isn’t my cup of tea but this is a truly beautiful house.
sdArchitecture on 23 Dec 2011 at 8:47 am #
it is an amazing dwelling! the site for this fantastic house could not have been picked better.
Michelle from MD Interior Design on 23 Dec 2011 at 7:33 pm #
Wow! A billion dollar view from every room. I was trying to concentrate on the interior but my eye was constantly drawn to the view!
Magnificent!
michelle
Joe Fugere on 24 Dec 2011 at 2:29 pm #
One of the finest designed homes I’ve seen on Contemporist. Truly organic…there is soul in that building.
Peter van der Veer on 26 Dec 2011 at 4:32 am #
A special commendation for the photography by Ciro Coelho here.
Although the standard is consistently high with Contemporist postings where we see optimum angles and exemplary balance between ambient and artificial light by photographers, these images demonstrate additional virtuosity of doing this at optimum times with an exceptional sympathetic empathy.
Latedrop on 29 Dec 2011 at 12:25 am #
Epic
Toby on 29 Dec 2011 at 7:15 pm #
I agree with Joe.. Without a doubt, my favourite house of the year! Looks to be a very harmonious relationship between client/architect & site. Brilliant work!
Morten on 02 Jan 2012 at 8:43 am #
Beautiful!
Stunning views and fantastic architecture.