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Situated on a modest plot in the eastern suburbs of Sydney, this ridgetop home is clad with white-painted timber boards referencing the traditional fishing cottages of the area.
Taking its name from the Y shape of its plan, this getaway in Alberta is entirely clad in weathering steel, lending it an earthy patina suited to its rural setting.
Just north of Vicenza, a modest residence topped with a pyramidal roof incorporates traditional, low-carbon materials—wood, thatch, and lime plaster—adapted to modern-day construction processes.
This island-bound villa in Spain features fluted, sand-colored concrete walls sliced by ribbon windows, terraces, and patios, creating a dynamic composition of solid and void, heaviness and lightness.
This cedar-clad residence located in Washington’s Methow Valley offers warmth during snowy winters, protection from wildfires during the summer, and expansive views in all directions.
This black-clad addition to an existing Long Island house includes a second-floor painting studio, powder room, and garage that doubles as an exhibition space when not populated by a 1966 Chevy Impala.
A beachside home for a family with children draws from the honest expression of structure that characterized California’s mid-century modern architecture.
With its slatted cedar facade and furnished roof deck, Harbor Hideaway acts as a lookout tower within a small peninsular neighborhood in the Long Island village of Sag Harbor.