Set on a 25-acre site, the 2,400-square-foot house has a material palette restricted to cinder blocks, concrete, and plywood laminate. A modest budget made economy essential, and a straightforward parti ensured that the structure could be delivered with relative ease. The primary floor is divided into a nine-square grid, with symmetrical fenestration and only a few enclosed rooms.
There are second-level annex spaces, but these are ancillary to the plan, comprising a lofted bedroom over the first-floor bathrooms and a netted rumpus space strewn with pillows (presumably for the use of the client’s small children) strung over the lounge area. The most striking feature of the scheme is the ceiling: fashioned of plywood, it expresses the grid in a series of deep rectilinear coffers, pitched at the sides under the angle of the gabled roof and pierced from place to place by skylights that cast pools of sunshine on the floor below.
Referencing multiple architectural traditions—the one-room cabins of the American frontier, the rational grids of mainstream Modernism, the makeshift materiality of DIY—the design of the House of the Woodland is a testament to WOJR’s sophistication as well as its resourcefulness. Warm, cozy, but without a trace of preciousness, the project manages a delicate balancing act, in tune both with the beauty of the remote forested site and with the brief’s frank, no-nonsense attitude.