05 Jun This cool Palo Alto home has a design inspired by the Rubik’s Cube
A young Palo Alto, California couple with three children came to Studio VARA with the desire to build a more modern interpretation of the traditional home that occupied this prominent corner lot in Old Palo Alto. As a couple that loves entertaining, they envisioned a multi-purpose home with ample room for their family, as well as generous social spaces that seamlessly flow from the inside out with as little circulation space as possible.
Though challenged by the constraints of their small lot, a collaborative and thoughtful approach allowed a final solution to emerge that seamlessly integrated landscape, architecture, and interiors into a cohesive whole. With our guidance, the couple’s search for comfort, efficiency, spaciousness, and light, gradually transformed their traditional vision into this contemporary work of total design.
DESIGN DETAILS: ARCHITECTURE and INTERIORS Studio VARA CONTRACTOR Von Clemm Construction STRUCTURAL ENGINEER FTF Engineering LANDSCAPE DESIGN Studio VARA LIGHTING DESIGNER Tucci Lighting AUDIO/ VISUAL Adaptive System Studio
The lot sits on a quaint Palo Alto street corner with high visibility, but with zoning constraints, setbacks, and adjacent neighbors that severely limit the space in which to maneuver. The challenge of fitting the client’s sizable program into this tight envelope while maximizing the remaining outdoor space is achieved through a careful approach to site design and an analytical series of massing studies.
The resulting form is positioned at the outermost corner to preserve the rear yard and the massing is optimized to achieve the maximum interior volume allowable across the two upper floors and basement. The ground floor is carved away in the center to wrap around a small central courtyard which brings daylight and outdoor space into close proximity with all the interior spaces, blurring the line between inside and outside to maximize the livable space of the home.
From the street, the house appears to hover lightly above the ground, with the effect of slightly elevating the first floor above grade and recessing the base below decks and wing walls around the perimeter. Overall, the exterior reads as a composition of stacked volumes, an effect that is emphasized by giving each level a unique primary material: board-formed concrete for the basement, cedar, and larch siding for the main level, and exquisite dark panelized zinc for the top floor.
These various materials are stitched into a cohesive whole through meticulous attention to detail both inside and out, with every corner and transition thoroughly considered to reinforce a consistent formal and material narrative. A final layer of ornament is layered in through a series of metal and wood sunshades, screens, and railings that add a fine-grained scale and tactile decoration to the composition, while also serving to mediate views and light from inside to outside.
This elevated level of detail blends the architecture with the finer textures of the interiors and the landscape, weaving it into a total composition of light, shadow, color, and texture that captures the eye and envelops the body in a sphere of comfort and serenity.
Packed in like a Rubik’s Cube yet meticulously proportioned to ensure livability, these private spaces turn both inward and open out to a series of roof decks at the ends. Light pours in from a skylight and large window in the stairwell and cascades down a central stone wall alongside the steel and wood stair that connects this private level to the family rooms below.
This expansive first floor sits above an equally large basement and is elevated above the ground to allow the sun to angle in through a series of light wells and apertures in the decks to the spaces below.
What We Love: This Palo Alto home offers an ideal indoor-outdoor living atmosphere, perfect for both family enjoyment and entertaining. Abundant natural light streaming through its expansive windows and a skylight in the stairwell creates a warm and inviting environment throughout. Overall, we love the design of this home, with its open and airy layout and family-centric living spaces.
Tell Us: What are your overall thoughts on the design of this home? Would you change any of the details if this were your personal residence? Let us know in the Comments!
Note: Be sure to have a look at a couple of other fabulous home tours that we have highlighted here on One Kindesign in the state of California: Fresh modern update to an Eichler house in the San Francisco Bay Area and Magnificent 18th century estate reborn in Palo Alto: Gray Gables.
In contrast to the expansive and open ground floor, the second floor is a compact rectilinear volume that is fit out with a neat series of bedrooms and bathrooms wrapped around a light-flooded central stairwell.
The basement’s ten-foot-tall ceilings and floor-to-ceiling windows allow the daylight to pour in and expand the sense of space to make this lower level feel light, spacious and open.
Three walls of sliding and pocketing glass doors open up to a meticulously designed series of decks and patios that blur the lines between indoors and out while taking advantage of the temperate climate to transform the backyard into an extension of the interior entertainment spaces.
PHOTOGRAPHER Matthew Millman
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