Screen House / Randy Bens Architect

Screen House / Randy Bens Architect - Windows, FacadeScreen House / Randy Bens Architect - Stairs, Chair, HandrailScreen House / Randy Bens Architect - Shelving, Windows, Beam, Handrail, DeckScreen House / Randy Bens Architect - Stairs, HandrailScreen House / Randy Bens Architect - More Images+ 21

New Westminster, Canada

Text description provided by the architects. The clients of this 1954 bungalow asked Randy Bens Architect to add a new floor to the existing structure. Located in a post war suburban neighborhood that sits at the prow of a hill in New Westminster, British Columbia, the bungalow is surrounded by rich modernist architecture from that era. The existing house was an L-shaped bungalow that was too small for the clients, an artist and psychologist, who have three boys ages 17 to 26. The new floor would be the domain of the parents, and the boys would acquire main floor bedrooms of a more suitable size. The addition would be composed of a studio, master suite, and a deck to take advantage of the view. Architecturally, the goal was to knit together the old and new with simple gestures and materials that would be sympathetic to their context, yet fresh.

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Cite: "Screen House / Randy Bens Architect" 08 Mar 2011. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/117561/screen-house-randy-bens-architect> ISSN 0719-8884

© Roger Brooks Photography

Screen House / Randy Bens Architect

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