The Design Trade
In a South Minneapolis neighborhood of century-old housing stock, Julie Snow’s bold but elegant residential design fulfilled Andrew Blauvelt and Scott Winter’s desire for a loft on the ground.
It all began in Marfa, Texas, a decade ago, when Andrew Blauvelt, the design director and curator at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, and Julie Snow, principal of Julie Snow Architects, both attended the inauguration of Dan Flavin’s seminal fluorescent light works at the Chinati Foundation. Flavin’s work was commanding, but it was Donald Judd’s concrete sculptures near the perimeter of the Chinati property that seduced Blauvelt. He was intrigued by the interface of the bunkerlike concrete slabs with the flat open land and loved the rhythm of Judd’s repeating forms. In a “Eureka!” moment Blauvelt knew a concrete home would be in his future.
But it wasn’t until after the trip that a deal between the two would be cemented: Blauvelt would go to work on Snow’s monograph Julie Snow Architects for Princeton Architectural Press if she would design him a home. Around the same time, Blauvelt was in the midst of a nascent relationship with colleague Scott Winter, the Walker’s director of the annual fund. The two began sharing living quarters in lofts in both Minneapolis and St. Paul. “What we really wanted was a loft on the ground with an open plan, but not a condo,” says Winter. But finding a city lot near the Walker, a must given their demanding schedules, was no small task.
In 2004 Blauvelt found a lot for sale at the intersection of a four-lane artery and a two-lane cross street. The approximately 40-by-120-foot site had been vacant for decades and offered mature walnut and honey locust trees. Better yet, it was just over two miles from the office. At that moment, Blauvelt was entrenched in the Walker exhibition Some Assembly Required: Contemporary Prefabricated Houses, and he had prefab on the brain. But he kept coming back to Judd’s concrete sculptures. “I simply was drawn to the notion of concrete. So much great modern architecture has made use of it,” he states. “The challenge, though, was to build a modern house that didn’t cost a million, but was still in the city.” Winter adds, “After all, we’re just two people working for a nonprofit.”
A portion of Blauvelt’s 3,000-book library is archived in the long entry hall where the geometry of a Noguchi lamp plays off a pair of minimalist prints by Daniel Buren.
The deeply collaborative design process that ensued felt more like an architect-to-architect dialogue than an architect-to-client discussion. Snow shared sketches with Blauvelt and he drew designs to send back. Later, the trio would meet, handling chunks of concrete, wood, metal, glass, and other inspirational materials, to get a real sense of their tactility and material relationship. “Andrew is not trained in architecture, but he knows more about design than many architects,” Snow says. “His library of design and architecture books is the most extensive of anyone I know. He’s compositional—he thinks in composed elements.”
Ultimately, that graphic designer’s orderly sense resulted in a 24-foot-grid module that determined the house’s design. The flat-roofed concrete, wood, and glass house is essentially two joined 24-foot cubes, a similarly sized 16-foot-long walled courtyard, and a 24-by-24-foot garage. Blauvelt describes the nearly 2,000-square-foot home as “unheroic,” and adds, “The grid design is a graphic control of the space.”
“I simply was drawn to the notion of concrete. So much great modern architecture has made use of it,” Blauvelt says.
In contrast to the concrete, ipe—a dense, hard, rot-resistant wood—clads the second floor. The rich red-brown of the long horizontal ipe planks nicely sets off the unpigmented concrete below. But the real atmospheric tour de force is the rear, east-facing glass wall that rises the structure’s full two stories. “The light is beautiful but the wall is awfully revealing from the east,” Blauvelt says. In another highly graphic move—designers do love their grids—Blauvelt notes that the window modulation is in two-, three-, and four-foot combinations, comparing it to a mathematics game.
One game that the couple rejects, however, is the one where a seemingly agoraphobic modernist, flat-roofed home on a large lot carefully camouflages itself behind trees and a large lawn. Rather, the house is exposed to everyone, in a neighborhood largely featuring early 20th-century homes and apartments. “It is a response to a corner lot at a busy intersection,” says Snow. And although it is unique to the neighborhood, “it fits the city and the pattern of the neighborhood’s older housing stock—front yard, porch, house, yard, and garage—but with an updated design sense,” she says.
A monumental German climate map enlivens the dining area, which also sports CH 23 & CH 30 chairs by Hans Wegner.
The house’s aim, to create a calming private space on a well-trod urban corner, is manifested through the crisp grid design and the master stroke of Snow’s plan: the malleable central courtyard, which seamlessly morphs from a serene retreat to a space that easily houses bustling parties. It’s also the perfect spot for a morning cup of coffee in the sun, a nicely shaded lunch, and a cool place for cocktails and dinner in the warmer months. “It is scaled perfectly for two but can easily accommodate 20 to 25 guests,” comments Winter. “It’s a bit of a miracle that way.”
“The center courtyard is the focal point of the house and that space is meant to be a sanctuary, a calming focus for us,” Blauvelt continues. “The house is a great respite from the Walker’s busy event schedule, and we simply take refuge in it from the demands of our public life. It becomes even more important in Minneapolis as you are denied access to outdoor living so much of the year.”
With Snow’s monograph and the Blauvelt-Winter House completed, the designers’ bargain is satisfied and each is thrilled with the results. The architect’s monograph benefits from a clean, careful design, and the couple got just what they wanted: a simple house with a keen sense of material, scale, and proportion. Their sole regret: “I didn’t build a library,” Blauvelt sighs.
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Great house. I especially love the courtyard, kitchen and bath. Well, I really love all of it. Thank you, Dwell, for: the many photos; putting live people in them (and showing the house as lived-in); the great photography; and the lighthearted and well-written captions.
Beautiful home. Who would think that concrete could be so beautiful and comfortable.
I love the house, especially the courtyard, for such a small city lot. I saw that Mr. Blauvelt regrettted that he did not built a library. He can still have a library built on one side of the two story living room blank walls. He can have the bookcases built all the way up to the ceiling on one side and have a tall rolling ladder attached to the bookcases, and leave one wall empty for big paintings or artworks. Overall, the house is like a little jewel!
This is a beautiful home and seems like a perfect fit in any urban setting with a small lot. A great use of light to give the home such an open feeling. Are their detailed floor plans available? daniel 10.09.10
This house is fantastic! This is another one I keep coming back to look at. Thank you for sharing.
does anyone know a source for the Schubert Opera Snow White Poster?
Last time I was in Minneapolis it was colder than my ex-wife's heart. How do these un-insulated concrete walls hold up in sub-zero temperatures or do these two just pay exorbitant utility bills?
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