NaCl House / David Jameson Architect

Architects: David Jameson Architect Inc. – Ron Southwick
Location: Bethesda, Maryland, USA
Area: 450 sqm
Site Area: 0.52 acres
Completion: November, 2011
Photographs: Paul Warchol
Salop Gelman Residence / Travis Price Architects

Architects: Travis Price Architects – Travis Price, Patrick Swift
Location: Bethesda, MD, USA
Project Manager: Diego Balagna
Project year: 2010
Photographs: Kenneth M. Wyner
Glenbrook Residence / David Jameson Architect

Shaped largely by the site, the Glenbrook Residence is conceptually a courtyard inserted between two heavy walls. Threading the walls through the treescape to create distinct yet connected structures allows the house to be divided spatially into the most public, most private and a living pavilion that can become either or both. The residual in-between spaces create outdoor rooms that engage the building.
Architects: David Jameson Architect
Location: Bethesda, Maryland, USA
Principal: David Jameson, FAIA
Project Architect: Ron Southwick
Contractor: Accent General Contracting, Inc.
Project Year: 2005
Photographs: Paul Warchol Photography
Hampden Lane House / Robert Gurney Architect

Located in the Edgemoore community of Bethesda, the client for this project was a young, forward thinking entrepreneur with no desire for a nostalgic or revivalist style house. Rather, the client desired a house that was efficient and with a minimal footprint, leaving the majority of the lot unoccupied by building and hardscape.
More photographs and drawings following the break.
Architects: Robert Gurney Architect
Location: Bethesda, Maryland, USA
Project Architect: Brian Tuskey
Contractor: John Thompson
Engineer: D. Anthony Beale LLC
Project Area: 2,200 sqf
Project Year: 2010
Photographs: Maxwell MacKenzie Architectural Photographer
Jigsaw Residence / David Jameson Architect

Recycling a single story suburban house located on a busy corner site, the Jigsaw Residence introverts itself in a continuous spatial flow around an open air courtyard carved from the home’s remains. A matrix of spaces is linked by movement through them as storeys merge and spaces relate to each other as they rise and fall in a series of interlocked puzzle-like volumes giving a unique three dimensional framework to each space where plan and section respond to program simultaneously.
Follow the break for more photographs and drawings of Jigsaw Residence.
Architects: David Jameson Architect
Location: Bethesda, Maryland, USA
Principal: David Jameson, FAIA
Project Architect: Matthew Jarvis
General Contractor: A&F Applicators, Inc., Steve Howard
Project Year: 2007
Photographs: Paul Warchol Photography
Black White Residence / David Jameson Architect

The Black White Residence inhabits the masonry shell of an existing house. Focusing the design concept around ruins and exploring the idea of aperture, the glass temples, black frames, and white stucco provide a stark contrast to the natural surroundings, all the while offering views to the landscape beyond. The design program called for renovations on the first floor level and the addition of a second level with a significantly smaller footprint. More photographs and drawings following the break.
Architects: David Jameson Architect
Location: Bethesda, Maryland, USA
Principal: David Jameson
Project Architect: Christopher Cabacar
Contractor: MT Puskar Construction
Project Year: 2007
Photographs: Paul Warchol Photography
Matryoshka House / David Jameson Architect

Located in Bethesda, Maryland this small house is organized as a series of volumes nested one inside another. At the core of the volumes is a suspended meditation chamber. Follow the break for more photographs and drawings of Matryoshka House by David Jameson Architect.
Architects: David Jameson Architect, Inc.
Location: Bethesda, Maryland, USA
Principal: David Jameson, FAIA
Project Architect: Matthew Jarvis
Contractor: Added Dimensions, Inc.
Project Area: 3,200 sqf
Project Year: 2007
Photographs: Paul Warchol Photography
Tea House / David Jameson Architect

The Tea House is nestled within a leafy backyard of a suburban home. Constructed of bronze and glass, the new structure references the form of a Japanese lantern and functions as a tea house, meditation space, and stage for the family’s musical recitals. This project recently received a 2010 Washington DC AIA Award of Merit. Photographs and drawings of the Tea House designed by David Jameson Architect following the break.
Architects: David Jameson Architect, Inc.
Location: Bethesda, Maryland, USA
Principal: David Jameson
Project Manager: Christopher Cabacar
Structural Engineer: Linton Engineering
Contractor: RKI, Inc.
Project Area: 180 sqf
Project Year: 2009
Photographs: Paul Warchol Photography
































