On the Waterfront
After purchasing a revered archetypal lake house designed by American architect Richard Meier, a retired couple launches into the home’s second renovation in 35 years.
It took nine months before Michael McCarthy and Marcia Myers fully realized what they’d actually purchased in Harbor Springs, Michigan. “We saw this white house listed on the Internet with a lot of glass looking out at the lake,” says Myers, who, along with her husband, had searched for years for a waterfront property. They scouted lake houses and talked about beachfront property in New Jersey and Delaware. “But we kept going back to the Harbor Springs house,” she recalls. “The price kept going down when prices everywhere else were going up.” So they traveled to Lake Michigan to see it in person.
They knew about the basics of architecture and modernism, but they were only vaguely aware of Richard Meier. All they really knew was how deeply they wanted the house. At 3,200 square feet, it was set among the trees on the steep side of a cliff, commanding views over a turquoise lake and 970 feet of private beach. The 1973 home had issues, but McCarthy, an engineer by training, cataloged them all and used the information to negotiate a lower price. The house had been renovated once before, in 1988, but it was structurally sound. Looking for yet more information before they bought the house, McCarthy decided to contact the three previous owners. That was when he began to discern the home’s pedigree.
Nestled into the hillside and largely concealed from view, the Douglas House is accessed via a footbridge that leads to the house’s uppermost level. Upon entering, the visitor descends to the lower floors via a winding staircase.
The house was originally planned for a different site located in a development. But when they discussed exterior paint with a homeowners’ association, white was rejected as a color. That didn’t sit well with Meier, or with the Douglases. “[The homeowners’ association] wanted it to be beige,” Douglas recalls. “I got angry.” Client and architect decided against the site. Then the Douglases found a waterfront lot with three sides facing Lake Michigan. “It was very private and completely covered in trees—from the road you could see the lake. No one else could figure out how to build there,” Richard Meier recalls. “It took me quite a while to do it.”
An original plan illustrates the extreme slope of the site.
It’s a notion explored earlier by the modern masters. “In my generation, everyone was influenced by Aalto and Wright and Corbusier,” Meier says. “[The Douglas House] has a separation of skin and structure, and uses the rooftop as an entranceway, and those things are all Corbusier. I think our work on the Douglas House relates back to modernism—it’s not isolated, but it is part of the continuum. Our work is not created in a vacuum.”
“In the 1960s and 1970s, to almost everyone at Princeton and Cornell [Meier’s alma mater], Le Corbusier was almost the Apostle Paul,” says North Carolina–based architect Frank Harmon, who worked in Meier’s office at the time the Douglas House was constructed. Tod Williams, who was Meier’s project architect for Douglas, agrees: “Richard saw himself as interpreting Le Corbusier. He was making his own mark by looking back at Le Corbusier’s work.”
“It’s about the way you walk in and what you see in a cinematic way,” says architect Henry Smith-Miller, a former Meier employee. “At one moment, it puts you out into the lake, cantilevered out via this great leap of faith. I think because of this that Douglas is probably Richard Meier’s best house.”
Michael McCarthy and Marcia Myers spent years rehabilitating the Douglas House. The double-height living room features a custom sofa and low table of Meier’s design, and an Edward Fields rug based on a sketch Le Corbusier created in 1956 for a Tokyo theater.
Once they’d bought it, they called Meier’s office in New York. The architect suggested that if they intended to modify the building they might consider hiring his firm. “But he said if we were going to restore it, we’d be better off using local engineers,” says McCarthy, who did a bit of both by assembling a team to move forward while at the same time striking up an informal relationship with then Meier employee and Michigan native Michael Trudeau.
The Douglas House is a clear nod to Les Terrasses, a 1928 residence created by Le Corbusier in Garches, France. Shared elements include curved walls, spatial ambiguities, and the series of ladders and cantilevered staircases that join the levels and encourage a cascading architectural promenade.
With the renovation now mostly complete, the couple has reached out to state and national preservation organizations about the home’s future. “We had no idea what we were getting into—but this is a keeper,” McCarthy says. “Our role is to restore it and maintain it for America.”
Forty years after its creation, the Douglas House has returned to its original intent—an architectural experience that moves the visitor through an exploration of inside and outside spaces. “The same is true in the Farnsworth House and Fallingwater,” says Meier. “The idea was there from the beginning—it’s about the making of space and how to articulate it.”
For more images of the project, view the slideshow.
Don't miss a word of Dwell! Download our FREE app from iTunes, friend us on Facebook, or follow us on Twitter!
Advertising
Advertising
Advertising
Related Products
-
Life by Keith Richards
The autobiography by celebrated (and famously…
Latest
-
02.21
San Francisco's "Forgotten Modernism"
While I was on a scouting trip for a future Dwell Reports…
-
02.19
A Zero-Energy Community: Part 10
Project Manager Brad Liljequist chronicles the building of…
-
02.17
Dwell's Cameo on The Office
For those who missed it, Dwell's December/January…
Follow
Dwell
-
Voting for the @CaesarStone Challenge is live! Cast your vote now for a chance to win an HD Flip Camera http://t.co/ExwpnR0H! #design
-
The Aetherstream hits San Francisco for the next eight weeks http://t.co/TEGDdzWs. Check it out in Hayes Valley #design #Airstream
-
Our zHome blogger explores an interesting #green #design approach: "designing for disassembly"-- & rates their project: http://t.co/c3efJzle
-
One of our favorite finds: Michael Murphy's "Forgotten Modernism" poster series of SF #architecture: http://t.co/UqUj1Ttb #art
















I LOVE IT :-)
Clearly inspired by Le Corbusier, Meier managed to combine the clarity of LC's earlier work with the complexity of LC's later works. Homage to the people who cared to bring the house back to the state it deserves.
Many thanks for restoring one of the houses I most admire. I've admired it from the road as I bicycle by and from the water as we take our kids skiing. One of these days I may get the nerve to knock on the door!
Wow--beautiful restoration! Kudos to the saviours. I am surprised and disappointed that it was in a state of disrepair.
Wonderful to see this house from my home town restored and enjoyed, And it's even better to see from the water, as I do every summer when we're sailing.
A worthy restoration on a landmark home!
beautiful, beautiful, beautiful . . . . . . . . light and space . .. . . .beautiful
well done...kudos to this remarkable owner taking true ownership of a master work...
When I was in undergraduate architecture school, and Richard Meier was considered hot stuff, the Douglas House was shown to us, and we immediately asked, " All that glass facing.......west???" It was immediately apparent that we were looking at a solar cooker. You can't double glaze your way out of an design gaffe like that, and there are no shades in evidence to combat the late afternoon glare. Lord knows how big the new HVAC system is. If you want to do puff pieces on Modernist design, that's your choice, but when you don't tell the whole story, it's basically dishonest.
I've driven by this place many times. My beautiful wife and I were married (29 wonderful years ago) just north of this spot in Good Hart. Always wondered what was down the cliff. No prettier place in the world during the summer and fall. I was inspired by the den and bedrooms. We have a much smaller place in Charlevoix so if I look north and east I can just make out this wonder on the horizon. Lake Michigan is a treasure. I remember a for sale sign several years ago stating "Will trade for a boat". This home has the best of both worlds, a lake view and no heaving and hauling.
Yo, Bob T., you obviously know nothing about current technologies in architectural glass. Double glazed, Low-E toned glass is used on west facing aspects to dramatically reduce summer heat gain and winter heat loss. If there's a will in architecture, there's a way to an elegant solution. JTM
I give architecture tours at the Getty Center. I LOVED this story
Over 2011 Labor Day weekend I was on a bicycle tour that takes 1500 of us along the road of this spectacular home. The owner happened to be standing in the back yard, and told me about this forthcoming article. She's as nice as you would not imagine! It is wonderful to know the rest of their home's story...thank you, Dwell
While Mr. Theis's concerns about the glass are valid, they are not a fair criticism of the Douglas House. Times were different when this house was designed and built. Besides, sun shades or other environmental system efficiencies don't alone make good architecture. The real issue here is that this house is the masterful manifestation of an idea, opaque to transparent, and a very basic architectural concept. It offers a dynamic set of experiences for the residents and visitors and fits eloquently into the site. As an architect, I put sustainability and environmental efficiency on the forefront of my projects, but those issues alone are not enough to drive good design. Over the last year, Dwell has shown some great projects that offered thoughtful placement of materials, elegant manipulation of light, space and color, but not a single one of these projects embodied such a diverse range of experiences all working together to create such a cohesive design as the Douglas House does. This project should serve to inspire us all and remind us of the long lasting value of good design.
It truly has been a thrill to work with the owners and McBride Construction on the restoration of this landmark of architectural history. The challenge of preserving the original design while incorporating the required structural modifications, has really made this a memorable project. I appreciate the opportunity to have been a part of the work. Thank you.
RSS Feed
Add a Comment