Woman sits on wood counter talking to man sitting in chair at round table in combined living room and kitchen with wood cabinetry, large round brass and green cabinetry knob pulls, cork flooring, large sliding glass door, orange tile backsplash, pink leather sofa, large red area rug, pendant lamps, and wall clad in medium-toned wood panels in a house by architect Jack Becker and landscape architect Maddie Hoagland-Hanson in an alley in the Capitol Hill area of Washington, D.C.

A “Farm-to-Shelter” Home Asks: Why Can’t Architects Make Buildings the Way Chefs Approach Food?

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Inside, Jack used sustainable, plant-based materials like cork flooring and bamboo structural panel walls. They exemplify the "farm-to-shelter" approach that he and his partner, Andrew Linn, foster at their D.C. architecture studio, Bldus.