The overall site plan of the island residence is designed to
choreograph the three natural landscapes inherent within the site:
a low meadow, an old-growth forest, and a steep bluff overlooking
the Puget Sound and Olympic Mountains. One enters the site through
the grassy meadow, open to the sky, path bending around a (future)
pond and across it, the guesthouse. The path then closes in at
the dense, shadowy forest of 75-100 foot tall Douglas Firs, winds
around the chosen trees, and finally arrives in a clearing at
the edge of the forest. Here, the main residence, separated into
three wings, burrows into the bluff's knoll and conceals the dramatic
western views beyond. A low metal roof and stepping stone walls
screen the larger wings and tenuously connect the North Wing,
the Main Pavilion and the South Wing. Interruptions in the low
roof and stone walls create understated entrance foyers and courtyards
that blur distinctions between inside and out.
Each wing is developed to uniquely suit the rooms it houses. The
North and South Wings sit on exposed concrete bases and are sided
with vertical cedar siding. Their asymmetric gable roof forms
bracket the Main Pavilion situated between them. The South wing
is comprised of the garage and an open Nanny/Guest apartment at
the east edge of the clearing. The North wing is comprised of
discrete rooms including the master suite, bedrooms, library,
living room, media room, and recreation room. The North Wing juts
out to the west, affording dramatic southwest views from the corner
living room and master suite, but also nestles into the edge of
the Old Growth forest. A wooden trestle, 14 feet above the ground,
weaves further north into the forest, and culminates at a hot
tub platform.
Salvaged Doug Fir timbers, raised from Willapa Bay after a shipwreck
left them submerged since 1921, inspired the form of the Main
Pavilion. The timbers were planed into 19"x19" columns and beams,
to form cantilevered frames that create three, open bays for the
main family rooms. Two, massive, masonry hearths interrupt the
timbers and define areas for dining, family and kitchen. Exposed
steel T's run across the timbers and support an exposed wood ceiling
and low-slope metal roof, punctuated by the paired chimney masses
and skylights.
Along the entire western edge, windows and doors fill the exposed
wood structure to highlight Sound and mountain views. Large, custom
wood doors slide away and interior rooms seamlessly extend into
outdoor patios and terraces leading down to the garden, lawn,
bluff, and beyond.