Aloft in the Forest
In 2003, Stefan and Nicole moved to Portland from Milan, Italy, taking design jobs as a product designer at Nike and a freelance studio artist at advertising powerhouse Wieden + Kennedy, respectively. They first thought they’d find a loft in one of the city’s burgeoning downtown neighborhoods. Tightly coordinated planning and an unusual culture of cooperation between developers and the city have given Portland its biggest housing boom since 1905, much of it concentrated in newly developed neighborhoods directly abutting downtown, such as the Pearl District. But lofts in the Pearl cost upwards of $300,000. So, as Stefan recalls, “More for fun than anything else, we started sketching on napkins and scrap paper. With quite similar tastes, a house very quickly took shape, so I did a fi rst pass at building a 3-D CAD model. At this stage we were too excited to turn back, so after a signifi cant amount of research, and about 50 CAD variations on the same idea, we had something worth taking to an engineer.” Stefan and Nicole (who earned her bachelor’s degree in architectural studies) put form to their fantasy by laying out the elements that would make their dream home: guest rooms for visitors well away from the master suite; a high-ceilinged open plan organized around a fireplace; floor-to-ceiling windows opening west, away from the street. “We approached the house from how it was going to be used,” Stefan explains, “concerning ourselves with proximity of spaces related to daily and occasional functions, rather than with the design of a particular room. Once this was worked out, the rest fell into place fairly easily.”
Stefan translated their napkin sketches into a CAD mock-up that the two played with for over a year. “We agreed on everything except the front door,” Nicole announces. “He wanted it yellow and I wanted it bright orange. In the end we painted it over with chalkboard paint, so it can be anything we like.” The CAD mock-up is on Stefan’s desktop and a quick tour of it confirms that their imagined home was built exactly as planned, with no significant changes.
The Skybox, named for its site on Skyline Boulevard, turns its back on the two-lane road winding out of downtown. Indeed, the modest rectangle of brown visible from the road suggests a kind of modernist Nordic cabin or a skiers’ shelter, belying the spacious geometry of the broad, three-story cube. Clad in darkly stained cedar and punctured with only a few small windows on three of its sides, the house opens up to the west as the steep, wooded slope drops away. Sixteen-foot-high windows wrap the western wall, framing the sparkling lights of nearby Beaverton and Hillsboro, visible through the thick forest overstory. “We mixed the stain specifically for this site, so the house sort of blends into the trees,” Stefan points out. The wood cladding reveals a burnishedaluminum interior wherever the cube’s geometry has been disturbed (a tall narrow slice is taken out of one edge) or extended (as where a metal stairway traverses the southern wall, up to the roof deck).
Inside, the 2,250-square-foot volume unfolds in a pleasing sequence of well-proportioned spaces. Between entry area and main living room, the stained-wood floors step up 18 inches, obviating the need for any divider. At the same threshold, the overhanging master suite ends and suddenly the ceiling is 16 feet above you, the room wrapped in high walls of four-by-eight-foot glass panels, slimly framed by two-inch profile steel.
“This is the clean floor,” says Nicole. “It’s such an easy house, with all the entertaining in this one great open space or out on the deck, and then the bedrooms and study all tucked away upstairs and down.”
“We wanted that feeling of an open loft space,” Stefan adds, “but with room for guests; a nice, sunny office; and extras like the master suite and sauna.” With the right CAD software, a strong design sense, and the willingness to be patient and learn from their engineers and contractors, Stefan and Nicole managed to achieve all their goals while acting as their own architects. “Perhaps our greatest challenge was to come up with a solution within our budget,” says Stefan. “But we can honestly say that the house came in not much, but slightly, under our budget.” Now they’re ready to offer their expertise to others: On the broad white tabletop of their shared office, shadows dapple the outlines of a new house design they’re working on for a friend.
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I just love this house.Clean straightforeward lines warmed up by the dark floors and the views of nature outside.What kind of floor is this?Also...is the kitchen behind the main living area?
Animals and woods are part of the fun of living in Portland.
I love this style of house, especially tucked away like that. I saw a similar house was being built in inner SE Portland. I would like to see more modernist homes built... we take up so much space, much of it what we don't need.
"Among the many problems of urrban living . . . are raccoons, deer, and falling trees." Huh?
That last shot makes me weep with envy.
I would hate to be the one cleaning the windows? Don't spill anything on floor, very slippery when wet.
The view of the ever present mist and rain clouds must be super
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