Flex House / Johnsen Schmaling Architects

Flex House / Johnsen Schmaling Architects - Exterior Photography, FacadeFlex House / Johnsen Schmaling Architects - Interior Photography, Living Room, Sofa, WindowsFlex House / Johnsen Schmaling Architects - Interior Photography, Facade, WindowsFlex House / Johnsen Schmaling Architects - Interior Photography, Dining room, Table, Chair, BeamFlex House / Johnsen Schmaling Architects - More Images+ 20

Sacramento, United States
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  3000
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2021
  • Photographs
    Photographs:Justin Lopez
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  C.R. Laurence, Blanco, Ikea, Iris Ceramica, Kohler, Wiemann Metalcraft
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Flex House / Johnsen Schmaling Architects - Exterior Photography, Windows, Facade
© Justin Lopez

Text description provided by the architects. Flex House is an urban infill project occupying a long-vacant parcel bordered by an existing apartment building that marks the edge of Sacramento’s Boulevard Park neighborhood. Designed primarily for a young family of four but purposefully planned to accommodate the ever-changing circumstances of life, the three-story Flex House pairs the family’s main dwelling on the upper two floors with a separate but programmatically reciprocal ground-floor unit that offers adaptable space for residential or commercial uses.

Flex House / Johnsen Schmaling Architects - Exterior Photography, Facade, Handrail
© Justin Lopez

As a whole, the 3,000 SF building is able to respond to future permutations in family composition, lifestyle preferences, and financial resources: the flexible and fully accessible street-level unit level can serve as the owner’s professional office or leased to other commercial tenants; it can be converted into a “granny flat” for an elderly parent or transformed into a rentable apartment that generates supplemental income; it can serve as a guest suite for visiting adult children and their offspring or even turned into a fully integrated, permanent expansion of the upper-level dwelling.

Flex House / Johnsen Schmaling Architects - Exterior Photography, Windows, Facade
© Justin Lopez

The building’s correlative program is expressed in two complementary, interlocking forms. An L-shaped, steel-clad plinth contains the flexible first-floor unit and a tandem garage and rises as a service spine alongside the slightly cantilevered, two-story wood box that houses the family residence. A continuous C-channel creates a deep horizontal reveal separating steel and wood volumes before transforming into tall, louvered apertures that accentuate the vertical separation between the two.

Flex House / Johnsen Schmaling Architects - Exterior Photography, Facade
© Justin Lopez
Flex House / Johnsen Schmaling Architects - Exterior Photography, Facade, Windows
© Justin Lopez

At the sidewalk, a series of slender columns and steel beams extend from the horizontal facade channel and form a trellised portico. From here, visitors can either access the main vestibule with stairs leading up to the two upper floors or pass through a perforated metal gate and proceed to a separate entry door into the first-floor flex space. The organization of the main dwelling intentionally flips the conventional program distribution of two-story homes upside down, locating the living hall and kitchen at the very top of the building and the unit’s three bedrooms on the floor below.

Flex House / Johnsen Schmaling Architects - Image 20 of 25
Plans

The elevated vantage affords the living hall – the center of family life – unencumbered views of the city skyline. A linear roof terrace carved out of the two-story wood volume runs parallel to the living hall and functions as a shaded outdoor expansion of the interior spaces.

Flex House / Johnsen Schmaling Architects - Interior Photography, Dining room, Table, Chair, Beam
© Justin Lopez
Flex House / Johnsen Schmaling Architects - Interior Photography, Living Room, Sofa, Windows
© Justin Lopez

The plinth’s subtly variegated black-oxide steel panels form a visually arresting and durable street-level building skin, its metallic robustness evocative of the neighboring commercial buildings to the west. In contrast, the family residence above is clad in vertical cedar, a nod to the clapboard siding of the historic homes to the east.

Flex House / Johnsen Schmaling Architects - Interior Photography, Table, Windows, Facade, Column
© Justin Lopez
Flex House / Johnsen Schmaling Architects - Interior Photography, Facade, Windows
© Justin Lopez

The faceted perimeter of the two-story wood box is composed of a series of thick wall segments at varying lengths, their vertical edges intermittently mitered to accentuate the building enclosure’s extraordinary depth. Continuous, white-lacquered steel plates complement the wood façade and tie it together, setting up a network of thin strands that frame the individual wood walls horizontally and provide vertical datum lines as a static counterpoint to the shifting walls.

Flex House / Johnsen Schmaling Architects - Exterior Photography, Windows, Facade
© Justin Lopez

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Cite: "Flex House / Johnsen Schmaling Architects" 07 Jun 2022. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/983230/flex-house-johnsen-schmaling-architects> ISSN 0719-8884

© Justin Lopez

Flex 之家 / Johnsen Schmaling Architects

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