Project posted by Rob Paulus Architects

Diamond Head Mountain House

Year
2010
Style
Modern
Exterior Staircase
Exterior Staircase
Operable Metal Panels Controls Transparency and Light on the East Facade
Operable Metal Panels Controls Transparency and Light on the East Facade
Exterior Staircase
Exterior Staircase
Operable Metal Planels
Operable Metal Planels
View From the Telescope
View From the Telescope
Panoramic View from South Patio
Panoramic View from South Patio
Kitchen / Dining Area
Kitchen / Dining Area
Living Room with Custom Palo Verde Leaf Pattern Chandelier
Living Room with Custom Palo Verde Leaf Pattern Chandelier
Loft Space
Loft Space
Framed View Study
Framed View Study
Generative Sketch
Generative Sketch
Site Plan
Site Plan
Floor Plans
Floor Plans
Section Drawing
Section Drawing
Elevation Drawings
Elevation Drawings

Credits

Interior Design
Baker + Hesseldenz Design, Inc.
Landscape Design
Photographer
Liam Frederick

From Rob Paulus Architects

This house for an astronomer in the Tucson Mountains takes full advantage of its sloping site to create a dramatic living arrangement in a harsh yet beautiful environment. Working with a minimal footprint, the stacked scheme utilizes strategic view openings as well as a vertical progression of spaces to proceed from enclosed and earthbound to lofty and skyward. An observatory on top of the hill with remote viewing inside the house completes the scheme.

Passive solar orientation creates large openings to north views with shaded glazing at south vistas that include Kitt Peak and the Tucson Mountains. Operable shade panels made from saguaro ribs control morning sunlight at the lower and upper floor east bedrooms while a small western aperture frames the colorful sunsets prominent in the Southwest. Efficiency in mechanical, enclosure and glazing systems further insure the comfort and livability of the residence.

Two exterior living spaces take on unique individual characters: the south deck floats high above the desert landscape while the north patio places inhabitants directly on the desert floor to look up at nearby Diamond Head Mountain. Simple geometries, tight detailing and rusted corrugated metal are contrasted with the varied color and texture of the Sonoran Desert.