Shoreline
Shoreline is essentially a cast-in-place concrete box designed to withstand a harsh location on the north shore of Lake Tahoe. The fire resistive and maintenance free shell builds a pavilion-like mezzanine plan in section with a two-story living space on the beach. The mezzanine houses bedrooms and a family room that overlooks both the living space and on grade garage below. An underground garage is accessed via car elevator and will store the client’s car collection.Spaced and acoustically insulated native cedar boards wrap walls and ceilings softening the soundscape in the concrete and glass house. Enhanced insulation and glazing systems combined with radiantly heated floors and insulated concrete mass walls mitigate potential daily temperature swings of sixty degrees. Full height vertical slits in the closed concrete walls facing the neighbors are angled toward the lake to provide light and view along with privacy. The two-story form extends to the south and east shading the interior from sun in summer yet welcoming it in winter.
PROJECT INFO
Type: | Residential |
Location: | Incline Village, NV |
Team: |
Greg Faulkner Joseph Sandy Vince Robles Christian Carpenter Jenna Shropshire Gordon Magnin |
Contractor: | Crestwood Construction |
Interior Design: | EKR Design Studio |
Lookout House
The building site had a significant influence on the design for this house. Layered with intense geologic history at the base of a three-million-year-old volcano, the site is a north-facing 20-degree slope with equal parts refuge and prospect at 6,300 feet above mean sea level. Consisting of volcanic sediment from ancient flows and strewn with boulders up to 15 feet in diameter, the site is in an open stand of second-growth Jeffrey Pine and White Fir trees. The vertical, plumb lines of the tree trunks, stripped bare from years of deep snow fall, reach for the light. Standing upright at an angle to the slope, they provide a constant reference to the perpendicular horizon in the distance. The harsh winters leave the ground sparse yet partially covered with a mat of pine needles and cones. Large waist-high clusters of manzanita group together and climb the slope in an organic, opportunistic pattern.PROJECT INFO
Type: | Residential |
Location: | Truckee, CA |
Team: |
Greg Faulkner Christian Carpenter Jenna Shropshire Darrell Linscott Gordon Magnin Breanne Penrod |
Civil Engineer: | Shaw Engineering |
Contractor: | Rickenbach Development and Construction |
Interior Designer: | CLL - Concept Lighting Lab |
Lighting Designer: | CLL - Concept Lighting Lab |
Photographer: | Joe Fletcher Claudia Kappl-Joy |
Structural Engineer: | CFBR Structural Group |
PRESS:
- Stinson, Liz. “A Minimalist Modern Mountain Home in California.” Curbed, 13 April 2020. Web.
- McKeough, Tim. “A Home You Can Ski Right Into.” The New York Times, 28 January 2020. Print and Web.
- Jones, Lauren. “You Can Ski Right Into The Living Room of This Mountain Retreat.” Dwell, 8 April 2020. Web.
Big Barn
A San Francisco family of four asked us to create a retreat from their urban lifestyle, reusing the footprint of an existing 1950s ranch house in Glen Ellen, California, while building in a consistent way with the area’s rolling hills and agricultural structures. Glen Ellen has many barn-like houses that confusingly mash up two design vocabularies, pasting residential-style overhangs and fenestration on barn forms in a kitschy blend. In contrast, this 3,900-square-foot house, dubbed the “Big Barn,” draws authentic inspiration from the site’s existing Tack Barn, which we had previously renovated into a bunk house. A simple, rectangular, two-story form emerged with an asymmetrical gabled roof. The shorter side of the roof faces the southwest sun and reduces heat gain to the structure. Fenestration is limited to this exposure as well and is organized as thin, full-height ventilation shutters that reference traditional barn building. The entry, a larger version of the vertical slit elements, is recessed for shading. The fireplace and chimney, foreign to the barn typology, are displaced from the structure with glazed joints. The east side is more open to the view and morning sun.PROJECT INFO
Type: | Residential |
Location: | Glen Ellen, CA |
Team: |
Greg Faulkner Darrell Linscott Christian Carpenter Jenna Shropshire Richard Szitar |
Civil Engineer: | Adobe Associates |
Contractor: | Redhorse Constructors |
Landscape Architect: | Michael Boucher Landscape Architecture |
Photographer: | Joe Fletcher |
Structural Engineer: | CFBR Structural Group |
PRESS:
- Jones, Lauren. “A Barn-Inspired Retreat in Northern California Hangs over a Hillside.” Dwell, 9 March 2020. Web.
- McKnight, Jenna. “Faulkner Architects Perches Big Barn House on Sonoma Valley Hillside.” Dezeen, 20 March 2020. Web.
- Jesus Revilla, Maria. “Esta Casa de Vanguardia se Inspira en Los clasicos Graneros.” Elle Decor Spain, 06 April 2020. Web.
- Karpukhina, Ekaterina. “House in Sonoma Valley.” Architectural Digest Russia, 3 April 2020. Web.
- Barandy, Kat. “Faulkner Architects' Modern "Big Barn" Echoes Rural California.” Designboom, 13 April 2020. Web.
- Jewell, Nicole. “Reclaimed Wood Home Resembles Barns in Sonoma Valley.” Inhabitat, 3 April 2020. Web.
Tack Barn
In the early 1900s, writer Jack London made his permanent home in Glen Ellen, California, a less populated part of the California wine country 50 miles north of San Francisco. Drawn by the land, London believed in the redemptive qualities of rural life. As the first step in creating a similar kind of retreat in Glen Ellen for themselves, a San Francisco family and repeat client asked us to reclaim a 1950s tack barn as living space. The family wanted to stay in the barn on weekends in order to get the lay of the land for future planning and constructions.PROJECT INFO
Type: | Residential |
Location: | Glen Ellen, CA |
Team: |
Greg Faulkner Darrell Linscott Christian Carpenter Jenna Shropshire Richard Szitar |
Civil Engineer: | Lea & Braze Engineering |
Contractor: | Hammond and Company |
Landscape Architect: | Michael Boucher Landscape Architecture |
Photographer: | Joe Fletcher |
Structural Engineer: | CFBR Structural Group |
PUBLICATIONS:
- Stinson, Liz. “Wine Country Barn Renovated into Simple Family Retreat.” Curbed, 24 January, 2020. Web.
- McKnight, Jenna. “Faulkner Architects Converts Barn in California’s Wine Country into Minimal Bunkhouse.” Dezeen, 11 December 2019. Web.
- Dalton, Melissa. “Before & After: A Ramshackle Barn in Northern California Becomes a Family’s Rural Retreat.” Dwell, 10 October 2019.
Creek House
Set amidst a volcanic boulder field in a pine and fir forest, Creek House is a family retreat that inhabits an existing outcrop clearing at the edge of the spring fed Martis Creek. Near the base of Lookout Mountain at Northstar California Resort, the house is conceived in plan as three directional bars that slide between and alongside the boulders and trees. The largest contains the main living areas and sleeping quarters. A margin sized bar houses the entry and support spaces and connects the third bar that contains a tandem, drive-through garage to the house. A south facing, 140-foot long, insulated concrete wall demarks the spaces longitudinally and situates the house in the mountainous terrain.
PROJECT INFO
Type: | Residential |
Location: | Truckee, CA |
Team: | Greg Faulkner Darrell Linscott Jenna Shropshire Owen Wright Richard Szitar |
Photographer: | Joe Fletcher Photography |
Contractor: | Jones Corda Construction |
Interior Design: | CP Interiors |
AWARDS:
- 2017 AIA East Bay Design Awards, Honor Award
- 2016 AIA California Council Residential Design Awards, Honor Award
- 2016 Leaf Awards, Residential Building Single of the Year
PUBLICATIONS:
- "Creek House." GA Houses 167, November 2019. Print.
- Faltermaier, Antonia. “A Minimal House by Faulkner Architects in the California Wilderness.” Architectural Digest Germany, 09 June 2018. Web.
- Davie, Leo. “Creek House.” The Coolector, 03 May 2018. Web.
- Lewis, Sophie. “Creek House by Faulkner Architects.” Est, 10 April 2018. Web.
- Lagdameo, Jennifer Baum. “This Concrete Abode Stretches Over Boulders.” Dwell, 29 March 2018. Web.
- Brillon, James. “Creek House by Faulkner Architects Preserves Boulders on Steep Site in California.” Dezeen, 18 March 2018. Web.
- Thorpe, Harriet. “A Concrete and Steel House in California Designed by Faulkner Architects.”Wallpaper*, 23 February 2018. Web.<
- Featured House: Martis Camp House.” Architectural Record, 15 February 2015. Web.
Burnt Cedar
This is a full-time beach house for a car passionate family of four situated across from Burnt Cedar Beach in Incline Village, Nevada on the north shore of Lake Tahoe. Prior to being pulled up the hill to flumes and rails destined for Virginia City, logs were staged here as the mountains around the lake shore were logged during the silver mining years of the 1860s.PROJECT INFO
Type: | Residential |
Location: | Incline Village, NV |
Team: |
Greg Faulkner Darrell Linscott Jenna Shropshire Owen Wright May Kemp Richard Szitar Gordon Magnin |
Photographer: | Joe Fletcher |
Contractor: | Crestwood Construction |
Interior Design: | EKR Design Studio |
AWARDS:
PRESS:
- Wade, Stephanie. Burnt Cedar, Faulkner Architects' Striking House on the North Shore of Lake Tahoe. Ignant, 03 March 2020. Print and Web.
- Mauk, Laura. Scene Stealer: This Minimalist Lake Tahoe House Makes a Splash. Wallpaper*, 13 October 2017. Print and Web.
- Baum Lagdameo, Jennifer. An Uplifting Lake Tahoe Retreat Uses Light as a Building Material. Dwell, 10 May 2018. Web.
- Eldredge, Barbara. Modern Tahoe Retreat Frames Stunning Views. Curbed, 09 January 2018. Web.
- McKnight, Jenna. ìFaulkner Architects Creates Family Home with Sweeping Lake Tahoe Views. Dezeen, 08 January 2018. Web.
Miner Road
The clients are a couple of environmental scientists who, along with their two sons, relocated from the Oakland Hills to the warmer climate of Orinda. Their commitment to sustainability, including a request for net-zero energy performance annually, was evident in their thinking throughout the design process. A three-bedroom program began as a remodel of a 1954 ranch house at the foot of a hill next to a seasonal creek. After finding the existing structure and soils to be unsuitable, the direction settled on reusing the existing footprint under the shade of a Valley Oak that had grown up close to the original house. The surviving portion of the original house is the fireplace which was wrapped in concrete and utilized for structural support. This made additional grading unnecessary and allowed the new house to maintain the same intimate relation to the old oak.PROJECT INFO
Type: | Residential |
Location: | Orinda, CA |
Faulkner Architects Team: | Greg Faulkner Darrell Linscott Jenna Shropshire Christian Carpenter Richard Szitar |
Photographer: | Joe Fletcher |
Contractor: | Ethan Allen Construction |
AWARDS:
- 2017 AIA California Council Residential Design Awards, Honor Award
- 2017 AIA East Bay Design Awards, Honor Award
PRESS:
- Rice, Eleanor. “Under Cover.” Enki Magazine, May 2019. Print.
- Arquitectura y Diseno, June 2018. Print.
- Mauk, Laura. “Nature Drove the Design of this Sculptural, Cor-Ten Steel House in Northern California.” Dwell, August 2017. Print (Cover) and Web.
- “Corten Steel Architecture: From the Atacama Desert to the Hills of California.” Wallpaper*, 03 August 2018. Web.
- Fiandaca, Roberto. “An Audaciously Modern House Bringing Steel Among the Oaks in California.” Elle Décor Italy, 01 May 2018. Web.
- “Miner Road’s Weather Steel Hides an Award-Winning Californian Luxury Home.” Opumo, 11 November 2017. Web.
- “Miner Road.” Architect, 10 November 2017.
- McKnight, Jenna. “Faulkner Architects Wraps Northern California Home in Weathering Steel.” Dezeen, 30 October 2017. Web.
- Ro, Lauren. “Dramatic Modern Home Dazzles in Weathering Steel.” Curbed, 30 October 2017. Web.
- “Miner Road House, Orinda, California.” The Cool Hunter, 07 September 2017. Web.
- “Nuda e Cruda.” Corriere Della Sera. Web.
- “Miner Road House – Faulkner Architects.” Harold Magazine. Web.
- “Miner Road House.” uncrate. Web.
Squaw Valley Ski Cabin
Built prior to the 1960 Winter Olympics and wedged into a granite outcrop on Sunnyside ski run at Squaw Valley USA, a long abandoned ski cabin site is planned to be rebuilt and shared by four families. The topography drops from a narrow private road at a 40-degree angle and does not allow space for a garage. A pedestrian steel grate bridge will span the drop-off to allow level entry directly to the main living space. The elevated floor will float above the boulders at roughly the annual snow depth of twenty feet. A steel box form fits precisely within the available building envelope three dimensionally. With steel sash windows, the cabin will withstand harsh winters and the threat of wildfire with zero maintenance or refinishing. Access to the ski run is built by a steel stair that is gradually buried by the winter snow ultimately providing access directly to the lower level ski entry. Squaw Creek is furnished with glacially smoothed granite boulders and beckons after a soak in the hot tub under the stilted house.Open to the south sun with a covered deck, the form is peppered with minimal openings to other cardinal points to afford privacy due to the close proximity of the neighbors. Prospect from this site is animated by skiers flying by on the Gold Coast Funitel as they make their way up the mountain.
Reuse of the wood beams utilizes some of the embodied energy of the old cabin and references past experiences through historical markings left from previous connections. The 2,400 square foot, four bedroom cabin sports a full roof deck accessed via ladder. A portion of the deck will house solar panels. Further energy upgrades include triple glazed windows, an enhanced insulation package and radiantly heated floors. At 6,200 feet in elevation, nights are cool which eliminates the need for mechanical cooling.
PROJECT INFO
Type: | Residential |
Location: | Olympic Valley, CA |
Team: | Greg Faulkner Christian Carpenter Jenna Shropshire |
Game Zone
“A larger place for the family to engage in fun and games together connected by a bridge to our house,” was the request by our client. The resultant project takes disciplined form in a two story, south facing rectangular barn-like space. The flexible oversized room for games is flanked on each end with yoga/exercise to the east and a screened outdoor cooking and dining porch to the west. It stacks over two private bedrooms below that open north to the forest.
Stretched along the east-west solar axis and facing the sun, the main space opens fully with sliding glass doors. The expanse of glass emits solar energy in winter to a heat sink of basalt floors. Horizontally coursed, an acoustically insulated cedar screen will soften the sounds of laughter coming from the new family hang out. The realized glass bridge transforms moods through total immersion in the landscape in route to the new space.
PROJECT INFO
Type: | Residential |
Team: | Greg Faulkner Christian Carpenter Jenna Shropshire Pete Austin Gordon Magnin |
Contractor: | Mountain Craft |
Interior Design: | Concept Lighting Lab, LLC |
Happy Valley Road House
Stretched along a south facing hillside in San Francisco’s East Bay, this permanent residence for a family of four is planned to allow extended visits by family and friends. Arrival by car winds below the house up the slope to a concealed courtyard between the house and hillside. A gradually unfolding entry experience weaves its way back toward the light and view to Mount Diablo through a concrete and glass one story main floor living space. A cedar rain screen clads a second story of family bedrooms.
Energy efficiency is considered via planned 10kw photovoltaic array, geothermal based hydronic heating and cooling systems, and upgraded efficiency levels of glazing, insulation and mechanical systems.
PROJECT INFO
Type: | Residential |
Location: | Lafayette, CA |
Team: | Greg Faulkner Jenna Shropshire Pete Austin Gordon Magnin |
Black Point Beach House
100 miles north of San Francisco on Highway One, The Sea Ranch is a community originally built in the 1960s as an experiment in building an environmentally sensitive community. Visualized by the Landscape Architect, Lawrence Halprin, development was planned to mesh with the existing land forms and minimize disturbance. Specifically, house parcels were organized within Cypress hedgerow wind breaks planted by ranchers to protect livestock in the early 1900s. Minimal, thematic architecture was used by founding architects, Joseph Esherick and the firm, Moore Lyndon Turnbull Whitaker that responded to wind and sun as initial form givers. An organic, common sense approach allowed the landscape to live and the houses and communal buildings to be built as a settlement based on similar values and construction methods. The houses here appear as weathered boats headed into the wind to minimize its impact.
The sound and feel of the beach break are strong. The property sits on the south side of the hedgerow, protected from the wind and looks across the meadow to the lodge and up to the ridge above Highway One. Adjacent, the original Demonstration Houses designed by Joseph Esherick in 1966, wrap around the hedgerow and back up to the highway. A filtered view exists through and over the Hedgerow Houses up the coast to the north. To the east, a farm stand of conifers planted by Lawrence Halprin remain in a densely packed thicket that creates a screen to the morning sun. Various footpaths lead through the tall grass across the meadow to the south from the neighborhood to Black Point Beach and the Lodge.
The formal vocabulary of the built context has been repeated via a simple rectangular shed with the family level elevated above the sleeping level to maximize views. Sliding Cedar shutters allow the house to be closed on departure, leaving a spare, barn like building. The main roof pitches up to the south like the neighboring houses. Concealed from view, a gravel drive enters under a Cypress along the east property line. Half hidden in the trees, the carport is built with galvanized steel. This allows the thematically consistent wood house to live quietly at the edge of the grassy meadow unencumbered by cars or a driveway. Materials are unfinished cedar, inside and out, frameless windows and zinc roof. From the meadow and Highway One, Black Point Beach House will appear as a simple shed like its neighbors and is designed to be low maintenance and achieve net zero energy usage annually.
Construction planned for fall 2020.
PROJECT INFO
Type: | Residential |
Location: | Sea Ranch, CA |
Team: | Greg Faulkner Vince Robles Jenna Shropshire |