Submit your project for Archello Awards 2025 now! Deadline 30 September 2025
Submit your project for Archello Awards 2025 now!
Deadline 30 September 2025

BLACK GABLE / SCHWARZER GIEBEL

Every design is unique to IT’S location. The Black Gable HOUSE evolved and rose up from the wooded dune landscape it occupies, evoking past lodge designs and functional futuristic technologies. The owner originally wanted a single level compact wood home  beneath a canopy of trees SO IT WOULD BECOME one with the environment and part of that landscape. Because of the 30-foot height difference, natural drainage areas and dunes, the triangular shape of the lot dictated a small footprint with a twist. The l-SHAPED home consists of two intersecting gables with large deck space connecting the two wings as half a courtyard.

photo_credit JDS
JDS
photo_credit JDS
JDS
photo_credit JDS
JDS
photo_credit JDS
JDS

The other sides of the courtyard ARE enclosed by the dunes. While the footprint of the home is small, the exposed gable structure and 45-degree sloped ceilings give the home a verticality that makes the spaces feel much larger than they actually are. The use of a glass balustrade to connect the loft area with the lower-level living room plus the full glass  gable end, not only connect the users internally, but extend views and CONNECT to the exterior landscape. The connection spine running the full length of the home east to west HAS windows on both ends extending the eye into the landscape. Up-lights on all the beam collar ties within the spaces expand the rooms in the evenings, like the warm glow of a campfire WITHIN  A DENSE  forest. The bathrooms function as wet rooms with ROLL- in showers, wall-hung toilets and heated floors.

photo_credit JDS
JDS
photo_credit JDS
JDS
photo_credit JDS
JDS
photo_credit JDS
JDS

The main challenge behind the Black Gable PROJECT WAS ITS siting. The home is built on Indiana Dunes which cannot be altered outside of the FOOTPRINT of the home. The site had a height topography change of 30 feet vertically and the new construction had to sit on that forested dune landscape WHILE ALSO displacing as little sand as possible and anticipating the eventual movement of the landscape around the design. Every effort was made to accept the changing topography, BOTH EXISTING and future.

photo_credit JDS
JDS
photo_credit JDS
JDS
photo_credit JDS
JDS

The logical vehicular entry point was the low flat area of the site along the north. Further influencing the placement of the home was the triangular lot shape with dune or higher elevations on the south side of the lot, ideally MEETING THE FAMILY DESIRES FOR VIEWS AND GATHERING SPACES.  IN ORDER Not to focus directly into the slope of the dune, the house was rotated 15 degrees  from its alignment with the street down the long side of the triangle to open up interior views as much as possible.

photo_credit JDS
JDS
photo_credit JDS
JDS
photo_credit JDS
JDS
Share or Add BLACK GABLE to your Collections