Hidden Valley Desert House / Wendell Burnette Architects

Hidden Valley Desert House / Wendell Burnette Architects - FacadeHidden Valley Desert House / Wendell Burnette Architects - Image 3 of 26Hidden Valley Desert House / Wendell Burnette Architects - Image 4 of 26Hidden Valley Desert House / Wendell Burnette Architects - Facade, WindowsHidden Valley Desert House / Wendell Burnette Architects - More Images+ 21

Cave Creek, United States
  • Mechanical / Plumbing Engineer: Otterbein Engineering
  • Client: Kim and Keith Meredith
  • Principal In Charge Of Design: Wendell Burnette
  • Project Lead Collaborator: Qianyi Ye
  • Design Team: Rebecca Gillogly, Austin Nikkel
  • Mechanical Engineer: Otterbein Engineering
  • Plumbing Engineer: Otterbein Engineering
  • City: Cave Creek
  • Country: United States
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Hidden Valley Desert House / Wendell Burnette Architects - Windows, Garden
© Bill Timmerman

Text description provided by the architects. The Hidden Valley Desert House is a “long pavilion for living” composed of a canopy hovering above a plinth.

Hidden Valley Desert House / Wendell Burnette Architects - Facade
© Bill Timmerman

The south-facing house is precisely sited in the middle of a saguaro-studded knoll just high enough to obtain distant views south to the west Phoenix Valley floor, the Valley’s mountain ranges to the south / southeast, as well as reverse sunsets on the more proximate Continental Mountain to the east. The threshold to this dominant eastern view is a unique confluence of ecology; a teddy bear cholla field growing out of a prominent outcrop of pinkish-red shale stone which is found running along the entire eastern edge of the site. The geology of this rarefied site condition is extended westward into a simple ground-based plinth at an elevation of 2450 feet roughly following the east to west contours of the site.

Hidden Valley Desert House / Wendell Burnette Architects - Table, Chair
© Bill Timmerman
Main level
Hidden Valley Desert House / Wendell Burnette Architects - Table, Chair
© Bill Timmerman

Hovering above the plinth is a large shade canopy that embodies the necessary sustenance for this shelter as a home. The thickened canopy will harvest the majority of the energy and some of the water needed for this close to net zero house, as well as housing all mechanicals. The expansive canopy is supported by a dispersed core of mass forms that minimize glass to wall percentage (35/65% respectively) while framing focused views for a range of indoor/outdoor programs north, south, east, and west. The west end/lower level of the plinth is inhabited as a thick cave, while the main level/top of the plinth is open in all directions and, at times, has no discernible distinctions between inside and outside. This plinth level is lived upon as one contiguous space under one continuous canopy that connects the 2000 SF indoor programmed space with 1000 SF of fully programmed/fully shaded outdoor space.

Hidden Valley Desert House / Wendell Burnette Architects - Facade, Windows
© Bill Timmerman

The materiality of the plinth is a hybrid economic construction of stepped local concrete masonry walls and an integrally colored concrete deck/slab rendered monolithic w/ a Verati-like plaster as required. The deep mill finish stainless steel canopy fascia screens the photovoltaic solar panels beyond while mirroring the landscape and sky. The underside of the canopy inside and outside is a black theatrical fabric scrim that creates a continuous feeling of deep soft shade while subtly screening the conventional gang-nail wood truss roof structure and black-fabric-faced R-38 sound/thermal batt insulation above. The central and dispersed cores are finished w/ similar “shadow reflective finishes” of cold-rolled mill finish steel, ebonized sustainable MDF (Medite), three different dark finishes of highly sustainable resin-infused paper (Richlite), as well as an integral color purple-black Wabi-Sabi stucco w/ vermiculite. The shadow cores meld with the underside of the canopy while housing a diverse range of smaller programs that free up the space within, without and between.

Iso Diagram

For our clients this house was about purging/simplifying their life and also about an indoor/outdoor house for their Birds, Koi, Rhodesian Ridgebacks and one cat and their very specific way of living.

Hidden Valley Desert House / Wendell Burnette Architects - Windows
© Bill Timmerman

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Cite: "Hidden Valley Desert House / Wendell Burnette Architects" 16 Aug 2018. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/899944/hidden-valley-desert-house-wendell-burnette-architects> ISSN 0719-8884

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