Chermayeff HouseGarrisonUSA
The relationship between man and nature is fundamental within the architectural discipline. In this project, a weekend house sited on the high grounds of a land trust forest in New York’s Hudson Valley, we challenge the conventional ‘man-looking-over-nature’ trope.
Ivan and Jane Chermayeff
GarrisonUSA
Homes
220 m2 / 2,400 sf
Proposal
The house is equally open in all directions. We welcome nature in by dissolving the traditional building mass into a loose gathering of solids and voids. Play between open and closed volumes, some mostly enclosed with window openings, with protective thick walls such as the library and bedrooms, others mostly transparent and open, such as a glazed living and bath offering a variety of relationships to the nature of the site.
Movement through different modes of living provides a dynamic experience. Common programs—dining, living, bedroom, study and bathroom—are separated from and connected to each other by un-enclosed courtyards. Active cooling systems are eliminated through cross-ventilation and the shade of existing trees. The house realizes two distinct conditions: “living small”—by minimizing the construction footprint, and “living in the forest”—by creating a permeable edge between man-made and nature.



Drawings
Team
Florian Idenburg
Jing Liu
Ilias Papageorgiou
Iannis Kandyliaris
Takuya Iwamura
Collaborators
Associate Architect: Sam Chermayeff
