Lobster Boat Residence / Chadbourne + Doss Architects
Architect: Chadbourne + Doss Architects
Location: Portage Bay, Seattle, Washington, USA
Constructed Area: 221 sqm
Project year: 2008
Photographs: Benjamin Benschneider
This house is part of a large waterfront property that has been incorporated into a condominium development that includes 4 detached residences and 2 houseboats. Residents share waterfront access, parking, utilities, and a shared vegetable garden. While sharing costs, amenities, and responsibilities; a stronger sense of community is established.
The Lobster Boat is a metaphor for a house that is economical, purposeful, and durable. Located on a dense urban shoreline site, this residence strives to celebrate its location while providing privacy to its family. A remodel built on an existing 24′ x 28′ floor and basement foundation infrastructure, the constraints of site and footprint result in an efficient vertical house that reaches the maximum allowable zoning envelope to provide a variety of interior and exterior spaces. Economy is embodied in every aspect of this project including the sharing of site resources; reuse of existing structure & utilities; efficient spatial organization; and the selection of materials and systems based on low monetary, environmental, and life-cycle costs.
- ground & first floor plans
- second & third floor plans
- section 01
- section 02
- exploted axo
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8 comments »
why do people tend to face seating furniture in the opposite direction of the pretty view?
Or why such a small window in the direction of the pretty view?
It’s not a contemplation place. It’s a house. Where you live. Not where you go there to meditate.
Valid criticisms re: the little windows. But I must say that as a modest project, it should weather alright. I just wish the exterior profile favored one direction (or another), and seem less arbitrary. Orienting a home so that it favors a particular aspect is a natural thing to do for water-side homes, anyway.
This looks like a comfortable house to live in. It is bright, open, and has spaces with a variety of scales. I like the exterior also, except I am not sure how the wood facade will weather in the Pacific North West.
Beautiful, lovely house outside, intelligent plan, too poor furniture.Grats for architects.
Rock Lobster! Lobster rocks!
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