Analog House Olson Kundig Truckee California
Joe Fletcher

Analog House

Architect: Olson Kundig
Location: Truckee, California
Type: House
Year: 2019
Photographs: Joe Fletcher

The following description is courtesy of the architects. Designed in collaboration with the client – an architect based in Truckee – Analog House celebrates a rugged, high desert site populated by ponderosa pine, manzanita and exposed basalt. The home’s footprint meanders through the understory, deliberately shaped to preserve existing specimen trees and create a protected internal courtyard. Extensive transparency and clerestory windows throughout the home provide access to views and daylight, while numerous indoor/outdoor connections link occupants to their surroundings, an important consider for this active family.

Analog House Olson Kundig Truckee California
Joe Fletcher
Analog House Olson Kundig Truckee California
Joe Fletcher
Analog House Olson Kundig Truckee California
Joe Fletcher
Analog House Olson Kundig Truckee California
Joe Fletcher

The interior palette features concrete and steel, punctuated by kinetic devices that engage both the built environment and natural context. Just inside the home’s entry, a steel mesh stair wall works with upper-level clerestory windows to invite daylight into interior spaces while providing visual and textural interest. The powder room sink references Japanese bamboo fountains, also known as sōzu, reimagining a standard off-the-shelf shower valve as a unique, gravity-responsive faucet. Dining room lights hang from custom bent steel armatures that organize and conceal electrical cords. Bridging the kitchen and exterior wrap-around porch, a custom fireplace can be converted to an Argentinian grill via hand-cranked mechanisms.

Analog House Olson Kundig Truckee California
Joe Fletcher
Analog House Olson Kundig Truckee California
Joe Fletcher
Analog House Olson Kundig Truckee California
Joe Fletcher
Analog House Olson Kundig Truckee California
Joe Fletcher

The glass-walled “forest hall” connects the kitchen and dining wing to the living room and master suite through a tree-lined procession with views to the surrounding woods on all sides. Clerestory windows line the living room, suffusing the space with natural light, while a cantilevered steel roof provides cover for an exterior patio. A discreet entry leads into the master suite, which includes an intimate sitting room, open casework closet, sleeping area and bath. The custom bed, designed by the client, faces the trees, while the master bath incorporates a private slot view as well as a protected courtyard.

Analog House Olson Kundig Truckee California
Joe Fletcher
Analog House Olson Kundig Truckee California
Joe Fletcher

The “treehouse,” a three-story tower, rises above the main volume of the home. Solid steel cladding grants privacy to the tower’s street-facing north side, transitioning to large areas of transparency on the other sides of the tower, which are protected by year-round tree cover. The treehouse provides bedrooms and attached baths for guests as well as a roof-top deck with views to Northstar Ski Resort.

Analog House Olson Kundig Truckee California
Joe Fletcher
Analog House Olson Kundig Truckee California
Joe Fletcher
Analog House Olson Kundig Truckee California
Joe Fletcher
Analog House Olson Kundig Truckee California
Joe Fletcher

Quotes

“This house has been shaped both functionally and poetically by the mature ponderosa pines trees that occupy the site. In the same way that you would weave through the trees on a forest walk, this home changes direction to respect and make way for the trees.”Tom Kundig, FAIA, RIBA, Design Principal

“This was my first time designing a home for a fellow architect, and it was a true pleasure to work with Greg Faulkner. Though I work closely with my clients on every project, Greg and I elevated that collaboration to a new level. It was truly like working alongside a peer, and the design reflects the dialogue that we enjoyed throughout the entire process.”Tom Kundig, FAIA, RIBA, Design Principal

Project Details

  • Completed: 2019
  • Size: 5,430 SF
  • Client and Collaborating Designer: Greg Faulkner / Faulkner Architects
  • Project Team: Tom Kundig, FAIA, RIBA, Design Principal; Steve Grim, AIA, LEED® AP BD+C, Project Manager/Project Architect
  • Key Consultants: Rickenbach Development and Construction, General Contractor; Shaw Engineering, Civil Engineer; CFBR Structural Group, Structural Engineer; Rock Point Engineering, Ltd., Mechanical Engineer; Michael Boucher Landscape Architecture, Landscape Architect; Niteo, Lighting Design
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1 Comment

  • Aldo
    Posted September 14, 2022 at 12:11 pm 0Likes

    At some point projects like this become simply a sculptural exercise for idle rich people. This has all the warmth of a bus station, crossed with a dilapidated warehouse, mixed into a State of California campground-shower. I have a hard time imagining getting insurance on this? The State of California is in the process of burning to the ground, with every year having more and more serious fires. So instead of a defensible space, or a rational response to the context of the environment, these folks decided to build their sculpture around fire fuel? I can’t decide if that is ignorant or arrogant? Since there is nothing in this house that looks like anyone is meant to live here, brutal, bare, harshly geometric surfaces, no privacy, I’m guessing that the folks who built this couple-hundred-thousand-dollar house, on another couple-hundred-thousand-dollar property, that only seems to be good for walking through, while looking at the (currently-un-burnt) woods for a few months in the summer, I’m going with arrogance.

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