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Architects: atelierjones
- Area: 1500 ft²
- Year: 2015
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Photographs:Lara Swimmer Photography
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Contractor: Cascade Built, Nicole Pi, Terry Ducatt, Al Fernandez, Mark Hughes, Sloan Ritchie, Kirk Hochstatter
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Structural Engineer: Harriott, Valentine Engineers, Jim Harriott, Elizabeth Lozner, Jouni Paavola

Text description provided by the architects. CLTHouse is a modest single family house for a family of four in urban Seattle. Situated on a small, leftover 2,500 sf triangular lot, the house negotiates between an oversized alley and rear bank parking lot, and an established neighborhood near Lake Washington. The materiality of the house recalls ubiquitous small Pacific Northwest beach cabins, as well as specifics of the site: once a beach itself, under 9’ of water in 1916. The house explores the dialogue between a blackened wood exterior, opening up to a whitened cross-laminated-timber (CLT) interior left raw, lightly whitewashed. Washed in light, textures and smells of natural materials, and to be surrounded in green, the house requires a tiny, vertical central service core. Channeling utilities from basement to roof deck, the core is shrouded with glossy white and ice-blue finishes, of unnatural materials – gwb, plastic-laminate, stainless steel and quartz. Surrounding the core, dramatic vertically lit spaces of the interior open up across through the kitchen core, through the staircase, up to the cedar roof deck with distant views of the lake. Spatially dynamic, reflecting the triangular site, the views are carefully screened and then revealed. Tectonically experimenting, the 67 CLT panels were pre-fabricated and routed using CNC technology, delivered to the site for erection in 12 days. Maximizing the power of CNC technology, some interior panels evoke pine knots, others are vaulted to create visceral experiences of light and space. Clad in burnt, shou-sugi-ban treated Douglas Fir, the house is blackened on the exterior, while the interior reveals the white, immersive, visceral natural experience.





























