Man lays on dark pink couch as woman reads a magazine in a dark wood armchair upholstered in turquoise fabric in living room with red pink area rug, large globe parchment pendant light, cork and wood-paneled walls, cork-paneled ceiling, and framed cartographic artwork 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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In the living area, furniture purchased on Craigslist sits on a reddish jute rug. Like all the interior doors, the TV cabinet is made of bamboo panels coated with hemp oil. On the floor is a midcentury brass lion sculpture, another artifact handed down from Jack’s grandfather, who was also an architect.