House on Lake Okoboji / Min | Day

House on Lake Okoboji / Min | Day - Windows, Brick, FacadeHouse on Lake Okoboji / Min | Day - Windows, Brick, Facade, Garden, CourtyardHouse on Lake Okoboji / Min | Day - Windows, Chair, Glass, Facade, HandrailHouse on Lake Okoboji / Min | Day - ColumnHouse on Lake Okoboji / Min | Day - More Images+ 26

  • Architects: E.B. Min, Jeffrey L. Day.
  • Project Team: Nicholas Papaefthimiou, Kristine Mummert, Matt Cavin, Christina Kaneva, Jeff Davis, Matt Goldsberry
  • Client: Paul Smith, Annette Smith
  • Size: 6000 square feet
  • City: Okoboji
  • Country: United States
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“It’s all about the lake,” was our clients’ direction when we began designing this vacation home in rural Iowa.

House on Lake Okoboji / Min | Day - Windows
© Paul Crosby Architectural Photography

Located in rural Iowa, Lake Okoboji is a part of a glacial lake system surprisingly located amidst endless cornfields, 2.5 hours from the nearest metropolitan area. The house sits on a diminutive lot on the dense shoreline where old cottages and new McMansions sit tightly together. Our strategy resulted in a deceptively simple footprint that minimized the size of the house on the site while allowing for a series of spatial frames within the house that focus on the view while excluding the neighbors. This allowed for a sense of total privacy within the house itself. Additionally, the lake itself is ringed by numerous oak trees which form beautiful a canopy around the lake, separating it from the corn fields.

House on Lake Okoboji / Min | Day - Windows, Facade
© Paul Crosby Architectural Photography

Volumetrically simple from the exterior, opaque and slatted vertical Ipe clads a stacked set of spatial tubes (the primary living spaces) that are open to the lake and woods views, but visually closed to neighbors on the sides. We formed the house’s spatial tubes around view axes running through the site, perceptually linking the lake through the forest to the fields beyond. These view-framing tubes are literal voids in the mass of the house bounded at their ends only by glass. Light and air also enters these rooms through operable windows set behind the slatted Ipe cladding. Dense service spaces (“program solids”) fill the remaining volume.

House on Lake Okoboji / Min | Day - Windows, Facade, Garden, Courtyard
© Paul Crosby Architectural Photography

The first level is dominated by continuous subtly amorphous space that opens to the exterior in with lake views in several directions. This space bounds the primary living spaces while suggesting connections and extensions to the surrounding landscape, lake and sky.

House on Lake Okoboji / Min | Day - Windows, Chair
© Paul Crosby Architectural Photography

In contrast to the spatial tubes of the public areas, the smaller private spaces (bedrooms and bathrooms) are treated with a pronounced sense of interiority. As spaces become increasingly intimate, the intensity of color increases as well. All interior surfaces in these rooms are subsumed by intense color to the extent that each feels like a zone of pure color.Here color becomes equivalent to the Lake that dominates the spatial tubes, providing and autonomous interiority in contrast to the site-oriented "tubes". Color becomes an important tool of space making, an additional layer that can reinforce or contradict the other components of spatial geometry, intensifying the experience or adding complexity.

House on Lake Okoboji / Min | Day - Table
© Paul Crosby Architectural Photography

In addition to the house and site, we were also responsible for all furniture, fabrics and finishes in the house. We selected and supplied most of the furniture, designed window coverings and selected custom fabrics for many of the furniture selections. We designed and fabricated several feature tables for the house, including a custom, CNC-milled cabinet for the master bedroom.

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Cite: "House on Lake Okoboji / Min | Day" 20 Jun 2010. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/64964/house-on-lake-okoboji-min-day> ISSN 0719-8884

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