The New Pioneers
In the land of large mountain lodge wannabes, two California natives tuck Utah’s first LEED for Homes–rated house onto the side of Emigration Canyon.
Our fireplace is going through a bit of an awkward phase,” apologizes Anne Mooney, nodding at the hearth anchoring her family’s great room. It’s true: The shiny steel surface is mottled with constellations of orange-brown rust. The house’s exterior, too, is surprisingly mutable. Cor-Ten-steel scales arranged in a harlequin pattern cover the boxy, rectangular structure, which is nestled in a canyon eight miles east of downtown Salt Lake City, Utah. Exposed to the elements, the scales have rusted to a deep reddish brown. During warm weather, the cladding expands and crackles, “like it’s breathing,” says Mooney.
It’s fitting that Mooney should talk about her house like it’s alive, because in a sense, it is. Mooney and her husband, John Sparano, are the founding principals of Sparano + Mooney Architecture, based in both Salt Lake City and Los Angeles. They designed the three-bedroom residence to be flexible and adaptable to the needs of their family, which includes their seven-year-old twin daughters, Claire and Audrey, and nine-year-old chocolate lab, Oso.
In the living room, Claire and Audrey demonstrate the magnetic quality of their fireplace by hanging artwork next to the wreath.
Though their neighborhood, Emigration Canyon, is known as one of the more politically liberal neighbor-hoods in Salt Lake City, architecturally it’s still rather conservative. Emigration Canyon Road, which curves through a landscape of scrub oaks, native grasses, and wildflowers, is home to a smattering of modern houses by the late modernist John Sugden. But new houses here, as throughout the region, tend to be poorly designed, energy-inefficient, “wannabe mountain lodges,” says Sparano.
At 2,500 square feet, Mooney and Sparano’s house is easily one of the smallest in the canyon. In fact, in an effort to minimize excavation, maintain a compact footprint, and retain as many native oaks on the 1.25-acre site as possible, the architects designed and built it at the absolute minimum size allowed by the local architecture review board. “Some neighbors have had a hard time with it,” Mooney says. “Once, a woman saw me at the mailbox and said, ‘Oh, you live there?’” Sparano elaborates: “People in the neighborhood have told us, ‘We want big houses here.’ The prevailing mentality is that houses should be big to retain real-estate value. The premium is on quantity and scale, not on design and spatial quality. But we’re saying, ‘Here is a model: We don’t need a house larger than this. This is the perfect size.’ We wanted to show there’s another way of building in the West.”
Sparano works in the dining area, where books about travel, architecture, and food, as well as framed architectural drawings from his grad school days, line the back wall. The hollow glass-walled light fixture is from Ikea; every few months, the family fills it with a different season-inspired item, such as pinecones in the fall and feathers in the winter, as pictured here.
The architects and Utah-based builder Benchmark Modern integrated a broad swath of eco-friendly features into the project, from dual-flush toilets that save an estimated 48 gallons of water per day to radiant-heated concrete floors powered by a tiny, high-efficiency boiler. There’s a rainwater collection system hidden below the garage that is used to irrigate the drought-tolerant, native landscape around the house. The exterior steel cladding has a high percentage of recy- cled content and comes with a hidden bonus: Mooney and Sparano can attach nearly anything to it with magnets, including house numbers and a holiday wreath. “You can do a lot with magnets,” Mooney observes. Indeed: They’ve used them to affix their daughters’ art to the metal fireplace; to suspend bars of glycerin soap over the master bathroom sink; and to clad a bathroom wall with a bright yellow, backlit sheet of acrylic, which clings to the steel frame via magnetic double-sided tape, easily swappable should they crave a new hue.
In warm weather, the family slides open the doors to draw in cool canyon breezes.
Mooney and Sparano’s quest to open Utahans’ hearts and minds to the beauty of modern green design may be slow going, but they’ve got at least two happy converts to date. Audrey and Claire are thrilled with their new house, especially its stairs—–still a major novelty, after moving from a single-story bungalow in Venice, California—–and the smooth concrete floors, which they slide across on roller skates and in socks. Recently, Audrey was asked to draw a house in school. “She drew a brown rectilinear volume surrounded by pitched-roof houses,” Mooney says. “Her friends said, ‘That doesn’t look like a house!’” Mooney suspects the friends will change their minds after a play date—–and the new perspective will likely grow on their parents, too.
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Fantastic. I love the library/bookshelves in the dining room. A great way to combine two rooms.
Great home. Does anyone know the name of the metal stools displayed in their kitchen? I've been searching for similar stools for quite some time now. Thanks.
What a wonderful home and thoughtful explanation of the mindfulness that inspired and guided its' design and execution. As far as the the neighbors that "want big houses here"..... It just shows that we (humans and the earth) really are doomed. For a glimpse at our future, rent the movie Idiocracy.
What a beautiful house and an inspiring story. Thanks for being modern pioneers.
What a beautiful house and an inspiring story. Thanks for being modern pioneers.
This is a beautiful and well thought out house. Congratulations. Where did you find a "tiny, high efficiency boiler", and what window system did you use?
Wow. This house is great, and even more so as a symbol of the modern movement in Salt Lake. It's no lie about it being on of the smaller homes in Emigration canyon (speaking from personal experience) since I know of at least one that breaks the 20k sf mark, and the average in her area of the canyon I can safely estimate at around 5k-6k sf. Congrats on your accomplishment Professor Mooney and Mr. Sparano.
Love it - what a fabulous home.
Does anyone know what the make of the pendant lamps are? I think these are really terrific, but can't seem to find the source.
The kitchen stools are a Jeff Covey model 6 design.
Beautiful home. I love it. It's a bit of a shame that the view seems to be to the Northwest, though. Can't be helped, obviously. Is it up to code not to have some sort of railing to prevent people from falling? As for "wannabe mountain lodges", I would point out that many of those are quite energy-efficient, usually a timber frame built with SIPs, radiant, etc.
I wonder if anyone has explored the health implications of living and sleeping in a steel clad building. I'm not a scientist, but I do know that steel structures create an anomaly in the earths magnetic field, and can also attract and concentrate EMF's and RF's.
Terrifc house -- looks beautiful in the setting. In a house with lots of glass, the measures to deal with excess solar gain (low-e windows, shades or curtains on timers, accordion windows) seem very important. PV solar panels would look great and easily cut electric bills to zero, and more importantly contribute to cutting carbon emissions from coal and gas-fired electrical plants.
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