20th Street House
This 20-foot-wide wood frame townhouse, located at the end
of a row along a narrow side yard, had existing front and rear extensions. The
building volume was selectively manipulated—in some cases through addition, in
others through subtraction—to improve room sizes, sequences and adjacencies.
Generously sized skylights, window walls and glazed corners were employed to
make the most of available natural light.
The front extension was carved away at the corner to create
a covered front porch, wraparound window and mudroom. The rotation of the front
door—now perpendicular to the street—attenuates the entry sequence (meaning the
visitor doesn’t enter directly into the main volume, as in a typical row
house). To open up the exposed wall to available light, the stairs were
relocated to the party wall. Instead of a straight run, the stairs take a
ninety-degree turn and are lit from above, by a large skylight. The corners of
the living room and dining rooms were eroded to bring light in and extend views
diagonally.
BFDO
Architects
Photo
credit: Francis Dzikowski/OTTO
The
rear extension was widened to about 15 feet to create a generous
mahogany-paneled kitchen with an island, pantry and home office nook. A deck
off the kitchen extends the materiality of the interior living spaces out into
the yard. Upstairs, the master suite is located at the front and insulated from
the bustle of the house by an airlock of two parallel pocket doors. A windowed
walk-in closet, sky-lit bathroom and west-facing glazed wall bring lots of
light inside. In the back, corner-wrapping windows take advantage of the open
skies behind the house to bring generous amounts of light into the children’s
bedrooms. White oak, used for floors, stairs and built-in shelving and cabinets
throughout the house, keep the palette pale and neutral.
In
the bathrooms, oak elements mix with cement tile and ceramic mosaics in blue
and white. In the basement, which is set up as a family room and equipment
storage space, vinyl tiles in a graphic pattern provide visual interest.
Outside, tongue and groove white cedar siding, paired with integrated fencing
and planters, creates crisp square corners. Rectangles of gray stain wrap the
corners and insets to emphasize the volumetric shifts in the facade
About BFDO Architects
BFDO Architects PLLC is an award-winning multidisciplinary
practice based in New York with a focus on exploring spatial and material
practices that adapt to the evolving relationships between inhabitants and the
built environment.
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