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Natural Houses

The Residential Architecture of Andersson-Wise

Arthur Andersson and Chris Wise

Princeton Architectural Press


New York
Published by
Princeton Architectural Press
37 East Seventh Street
New York, New York 10003

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© 2010 Princeton Architectural Press


All rights reserved
Printed and bound in China
13 12 11 10 1 2 3 4 First edition

No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner without


written permission from the publisher, except in the context of reviews.

Every reasonable attempt has been made to identify owners of copyright.


Errors or omissions will be corrected in subsequent editions.

Initial project descriptions: Julien Devereux


Editor: Wendy Fuller
Designer: Jan Haux

Special thanks to: Nettie Aljian, Bree Anne Apperley, Sara Bader, Nicola
Bednarek, Janet Behning, Becca Casbon, Carina Cha, Tom Cho, Penny
(Yuen Pik) Chu, Russell Fernandez, Pete Fitzpatrick, Erin Kim, Nancy Eklund
Later, Linda Lee, Laurie Manfra, John Myers, Katharine Myers, Dan Simon,
Andrew Stepanian, Jennifer Thompson, Paul Wagner, Joseph Weston, and
Deb Wood of Princeton Architectural Press
—Kevin C. Lippert, publisher

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data


Andersson, Arthur, 1957–
Natural houses : the residential architecture of Andersson-Wise / Arthur
Andersson and Chris Wise. — 1st ed.
p. cm.
ISBN 978-1-56898-879-5 (alk. paper)
1. Andersson-Wise. 2. Architecture, Domestic—United States. I. Wise,
Chris, 1964– II. Title.
NA737.A55A4 2010
728—dc22
2009015316
Contents

10 Preface
12 Introduction
by Rick Sundberg

14 Tower House
30 Lake House

46 Super Natural
by Jen Renzi

58 House Above Lake Austin


76 Stone Creek Camp

108 On the Salubrity of Sites


by Frederick Steiner

116 Collector’s House


132 Temple Ranch
152 Cabin on Flathead Lake

174 Influential Texts


175 Illustration Credits
176 Project Team Credits
Preface

The projects in this book were designed in our studio in Austin, Texas, from
2000 to 2008. Five of the seven shown are located in and around Austin,
where the climate is temperate but hot, and most years the warm months
of summer stretch all the way to Thanksgiving. The other two projects are
located in far northern Montana, where protection from the cold is its own
kind of celebration.
Our studio is made up of a close group of designers and architects.
Conversation and dialogue about the work is our daily bread. This collab-
orative spirit opens us to many influences—visual, musical, and literary. On
any given day, discussing the impact of a decision will bring us back to the
eloquent phrase of Sir Winston Churchill: “We shape our buildings; thereaf-
ter they shape us.” This is an aphorism that applies to all of what we do.
Our particular architecture is shaped not so much by us but by its
place. By this we mean climate, site geology, and site biology: sun, wind,
temperature, terrain, structure, orientation—the things that grow and that
can grow there. These elements beckon our engagement and ask for inter-
pretation. We have discovered that experiences brought on by nature—
sunlight moving through composed space and onto surfaces; emotional
strength gained in a protected space while looking out to a wild one; grand
vistas enjoyed in the presence of intimate rooms—these are the gifts nature
has given. We aspire to connect intimately with the places in which we
build. We view our buildings, and the experience of inhabiting them, as
celebrations of those places.
We have been fortunate to share the process of making these buildings
with inspired and energetic colleagues. A team of people works on each
project, in some cases for several years, to achieve a desired result. Special
thanks to Andersson-Wise Architects’ current staff including: Robin Bagley,
Jesse Coleman, Catherine Craig, Travis Greig, Trish Laird, Jill Reinecke-
Clark, Christopher Sanders, and Leland Ulmer. Also a special thanks to John
E. van Duyl, Peggy Hamilton Houser, Nancy Eklund Later, Wendy Fuller, Art
Gray, Matthew Millman, Paul Bardagjy, and Peter Williams for their assis-
tance in making this book a reality. Finally, additional thanks go to Matthew
Ames, Susan Benz, Gregory Brooks, Xavier Cantu, Anita Chumnanvech,
Erlene Clark, Tim Dacey, Steven Dvorak, Daniel Gruber, Kristen Heaney,
Wenny Hsu, Becky Joye, Alexis Kanter, Alexandra Lopez, Laura McQuary,

10 Natural Houses
Vincent Moccia, James Moore, and all former studio colleagues for their
contributions.
We thank each of our clients who must know that we treasure the mem-
ories as well as the friendships that have grown out of our mutual efforts.
Finally, we appreciate the influences of other architects, artisans, and
artists with whom we have had the honor of working. We have learned much
by watching others who excel at their craft. Both of us practiced closely with
Charles Moore, an architect who always reminded us that buildings are for
people, not for the record books. This humanist approach has stayed with
us and will continue to guide our work.

Arthur Andersson
Chris Wise
Austin, Texas

11 Preface
Introduction
The Architecture of Andersson-Wise
Rick Sundberg

The architecture of Andersson-Wise addresses the tension between nature


and the built environment—calling into question what we consider natural.
At Stone Creek Camp, the intersection of two types of space—the man-
made shelter and the surrounding wilderness—provides an opportunity for
reflection. By influencing our senses, the building elevates our understand-
ing of the landscape, giving it a historical and aesthetic meaning.
The built environment of the Montana Camp interacts with nature in
seemingly endless ways. Wood, stone, and grasses form the buildings and
the landscape around them, erasing distinctions. Inside the buildings, you
find yourself literally in nature. Decks and deeply screened porches provide
in-between places, offering both prospect and refuge. The paths between
buildings, which take you through meadows and down alleys, encour-
age you to encounter buildings from a diagonal, rather than on an axial
orientation.
Arthur Andersson and Chris Wise’s firm owes much to the legacy of
Charles Moore, an intuitive humanist, architect, and planner whose greatest
legacy was his exploration of place and its representation. His work incited
responses from all the senses. Andersson-Wise internalized these lessons,
and their work has a similar strength in the way it engages us.
In his book The Eyes of the Skin, Finnish architect Juhani Pallasmaa
writes: “The eye is the organ of separation and distance, whereas touch
is the sense of nearness, intimacy, and affection.” The Montana Camp
engages both our senses of sight and touch, though not in ways we might
expect.
Our visual perception of the site is quietly manipulated, setting the
architecture in motion. Buildings cantilever over the site, or burrow into it.
The experience shifts from floating over the ground—contemplating a lay-
ered foreground with a distant horizon of the Rockies—to peering out an
at-grade window, a literal view of the ground.
Tactility, expressed through an eloquence of craft, the use of textured
materials, and the logical expression of structural systems, gives the build-
ings a rightness within the landscape. They belong there, both materially
and historically. The use of wood, stone, and earth reinterpret the sod house

12 Natural Houses
and log cabin. The materials play with us. The heavy materiality of the mas-
ter suite’s facade—basically firewood—floats above the landscape, held
together by a steel frame. By taking the rough material object and organiz-
ing it, the wood wall does something unexpected. Texture—a sense that one
usually experiences by touch—becomes instead something that one experi-
ences through sight, as a compositional element.
Experiencing the project through the senses evokes something almost
semiconscious, perhaps genetic, in us. It is a natural place.

13 Introduction
Tower House
Leander, Texas, 2008

Of the series of Highland Lakes that terrace the hill country to the west
of Austin, Lake Travis is the longest, winding over sixty miles through the
natural terrain.
There are a few small limestone cabins from the 1930s on Lake Travis,
used primarily in the summer. One such cabin sits on a slope rising from the
water under a canopy of native oak and cedar trees. It had one large room,
a little sleeping room, a kitchen, and a porch facing the water. Our clients
requested two additional bedrooms with baths and a living area for larger
groups to gather in. Rather than add onto the old cabin, we chose to open
it up inside and locate the new sleeping quarters in a separate building.
The stone cabin is now juxtaposed with a vertical tower of wood, rising
up out of the forest and into the bright Texas sky. The Tower draws you in to
see the lake, barely visible at ground level through the thickets of trees.
Upon entering the Tower House, a small arrival space leads to
shaded stairs inserted between the outside wall and the interior rooms. As
you walk up, rectangular openings in the exterior wall invite breezes to
circulate and offer brief, tantalizing glimpses of trees, sky, and lake. The
orientation changes on every floor due to the winding nature of the stair and
circulation path. Walking is the best way to experience the building, but a
small elevator is also available for direct transport to the top.
Two small bedrooms with bathrooms occupy the first and second floors.
The interior walls are made of birch plywood, which is lighter in tone than
the Massaranduba wood outside. Large corner windows within each of the
bedrooms reveal broad views of the woods and the lake. Finally, above the
bedroom spaces, a third level opens to a panorama of the lake and distant
rolling hills beyond. On this terrace, some thirty feet above the ground, even
the hottest summer afternoon is enjoyed under a roof open to the prevailing
breezes blowing from the lake. In the tower, site and orientation provide
natural air cooling without relying on an air conditioning system.

View of Tower House from courtyard looking west

14 Natural Houses
15 Project
View of Tower House entrance from courtyard

16 Natural Houses
(clockwise from top):
View of existing lodge and Tower House looking south
Slatted opening detail
Detail of east facade

17 Tower House
1 Renovated lodge
2 Tower House

Tower House site plan


0 5’ 10’ 20’

18 Natural Houses
Tower House north facade

19 Tower House
(counterclockwise from top):
View of lake at second-floor landing
Corner detail of tower roof
View of slatted opening detail from stair

opposite:
Balcony at second-floor landing

overleaf:
View of lake from balcony

20 Natural Houses
21 Project
22 Natural Houses
23 Project
24 Natural Houses
(clockwise from top):
Second-floor bedroom
Second-floor bathroom
Barn door to bathroom on second floor

opposite:
Custom bed detail

25 Tower House
1 Entry
2 Stair
2
6 3 Master bedroom
4 Bathroom
10 5 Machine room
6 Elevator
7 Landing
8 Bedroom
9
9 Roof terrace
10 Kitchenette

Third-floor plan

4 2 6

Second-floor plan

5 6
4

3 2 1 Exterior Stair
2 Elevator
N
3 Roof terrace

Tower House ground-floor plan 3


0 5’ 10’

2
1

Section
0 20’ 40’

26 Natural Houses
Corner window detail on second floor

27 Tower House
(top to bottom):
Terrace view looking west
Terrace view looking south

28 Natural Houses
View of Tower House from Lake Travis

29 Tower House
Lake House
Austin, Texas, 2002

This structure, located on the steeply sloped bank of Lake Austin, is designed
for downtime. A nearly mile-long path leads the visitor down the hill, over
a suspension bridge constructed of individual segments strung onto cables
that spans a ravine, and finally down to the boat house. The simple, ele-
gant building rises above the water, resting on the surface like a water
skater. And like the surface-skimming insect, this off-the-grid domicile exerts
a minimal impact on its surroundings. Its structure, fabricated into a single
framework of steel and barged to the site, is anchored into rock beneath
the water. A floating carpenter shop was used to complete the construction
from the water side.
Breezes from the lake-top enter and exit through screens, allowing
the living spaces to breathe along with the river valley. The wind and water
combine to provide natural cooling for the entire structure. On the north and
east sides, the lower screens swing out to create full-height openings that
are impromptu diving platforms.
The Lake House provides a respite from the exhaustions of heat
and the exertion of swimming, but it constantly reminds occupants of their
proximity.

View of east facade from Lake Austin

30 Natural Houses
31 Project
(clockwise from top):
View from hilltop path
Stair to screened room
Bridge to screened room

32 Natural Houses
Bridge to shoal overleaf:
View of west facade

33 Lake House
34 Natural Houses
35 Project
3

Porch plan

Lake House boat dock plan 1 Grill


N

2 Patio 0
0’ 5’
5’ 10’
10’
3 Planter
4 Screened porch
5 Storage
36 Natural Houses 6 Sculling dock
South facade

37 Lake House
38 Natural Houses
(counterclockwise from top):
South facade detail
Lantern shelf detail
Shower at boat slip

opposite:
South facade detail

39 Lake House
100’
10’
5’

50’
25’
0

495
500
495
500 505

0
505 510
510 515
515
520
520
525
525
575
580
580
580
545
540 540
535
535
0
53 530
525
525
525
525
530
540
535
545

Lake House site section and site plan


N

Natural Houses
570
575
580

Section
5
58

40
North facade

41 Lake House
Open screens

42 Natural Houses
(clockwise from top):
Suspension bridge to Lake House
East facade
Hanging basket detail at suspension bridge

43 Lake House
(counterclockwise from top):
View from Lake Austin
Screened room
Screened room detail

opposite:
Screened room detail

44 Natural Houses
45 Project
Super Natural
Jen Renzi

The first thing the visitor notices about an Andersson-Wise design—whether


a home or a church or an art museum—is the light. A small aperture cut into
a thick stone wall coaxes the sunrise in for a fleeting hour each morning.
Windows screened by wood slats slice daylight into a Donald Judd-like
geometry. A covered porch curtained in white hemp glows like the inside of
a Noguchi lantern in the late-afternoon glare. Dusk hits a chunk of onyx on
a high steel ledge and fractures into a kaleidoscopic shimmer. In the hands
of Arthur Andersson and Chris Wise, light is ethereal, mysterious, slippery,
strange, and transcendent.
It’s no wonder that the two have carved out a niche in ecclesiastical
design; their handling of illumination verges on the spiritual. Credit this to
Wise’s upbringing. “My dad was a minister, and we lived right next door
to the church,” he says. “I grew up sneaking into sanctuaries. Quite early
in life, I had an epiphany about how light interacts with space—and how
spatial complexity can create poetic effects.” He observed how, as sunlight
shifted from hour to hour and season to season, architecture became a
living, breathing organism.
The two likewise use daylight as a building material. Andersson and
Wise have a soft spot for light-catchers, clerestories, and three-sided dormers
that grab sunlight from different directions throughout the day. Thick facades
are often punctured with “spirit” windows—their term for small apertures
that mold light into luminous planes, like miniature Dan Flavin installations.
“We explore ways of bending light and threading it through a building, from
one end to the other,” Andersson explains. That pathway is often oblique.
They use walls as mirrors to bounce illumination, extending its reach while
softening its harshness. In renovating the Austin home of an art collector,
for instance, the duo baffled a series of existing skylights by installing drop
ceilings below—not unlike shallow trays placed to catch a water leak. Now,
instead of blasting in from overhead, the daylight spills gracefully over the
edges like a waterfall, making a previously uninhabitable space serene.
Tempering sunlight is of course crucial in Austin, the firm’s home
base. During the summer especially—and it feels like summer much of the
year—there is nothing subtle or coy about the light. It is hard core. You are
constantly seeking refuge from it, sniffing out the elusive shade like a truffle

46 Natural Houses
hunter. Sure, the heat can seem comforting at first, even a bit luxuriant, like
a sauna. But the moment your defenses drop and your muscles loosen, the
heat bores down into your soul and holds you in its fast grip. The sun is a
cruel tease: it burns everything into bright, white focus then forces your eyes
to shut tight against it. In Austin, nature can be extreme and often harsh.
Andersson-Wise is a product of this environment. The firm’s work shows
Mother Earth for what she is: beautiful, yes, but also fearsome. The siting
of their buildings highlights the more rugged—even treacherous—aspects
of the surrounding landscape. A two-hundred-foot cable-stay suspension
bridge arcs precariously across a deep ravine. Houses engage with steep
cliffs, perch on vertiginous precipices, cantilever into thin air, or nestle into
treetops. Note the cabin on Flathead Lake, which—with its angled roofline
and stilt-like base—recalls a butterfly specimen, pinned almost invisibly to
its support. You would be forgiven for thinking that this avian structure might
flutter off into the forest. And the architects answered one client’s request for
a low-slung ranch house with a modernist, three-story tower—a lighthouse,
really—that offers dizzying views of a lake one hundred feet below. “Spaces
like this get your adrenaline pumping a little bit,” Andersson emphasizes.
These structures have a thrill-seeking side that belies an otherwise
composed bearing—a characteristic shared with their creators. While Wise
was sneaking into churches, Andersson spent his formative years taking in
the great outdoors. An itinerant upbringing took him from Los Angeles to
Alaska to Denver, environments where vermillion sunsets, craggy peaks,
and never-ending horizon lines instilled a sense of awe and exhilaration
that fuels his creativity. “As a result of moving around so much at a young
age, I’ve always drawn strength from the environment,” he explains.
Andersson is inspired by writers and artists who likewise take nature
as muse, from Henry David Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson to the
Hudson River school painters. He finds a kindred spirit in Thomas Cole’s
majestic thunderstorms, Albert Bierstadt’s Wild West, and the psychologically
charged imagery of German romanticist Caspar David Friedrich, known for
isolating solo figures against overwhelming landscapes. “Their paintings
share a common quality, capturing the spirit of the pioneer—out on your
own, pushing the boundaries,” says Andersson. “Tapping into that sense of
adventure fuels our practice.”
The firm’s designs certainly push boundaries, but not always on the
surface. Their buildings are not self-consciously avant-garde in appearance,

47 Renzi / Super Natural


nor do they grandstand. Most are planar, precise, and cool—characteristics
that usually connote restfulness, not risk taking. Forms are often derived from
the American vernacular of barns and cottages, with elemental, Monopoly-
piece shapes and angled rooflines. Many are sided in crisp slats of Douglas
fir or Massaranduba, which lend an almost traditional bearing. “We make
dramatic things,” says Wise. “But they don’t always manifest themselves in
overtly dramatic ways.”
Not outwardly, perhaps. Inside, though, is another matter entirely.
What appears from the outside to be a meditative space will, more often
than not, make your jaw drop and your pulse race. Walls of full-height glass
melt away, forcing your gaze out to the landscape beyond. Looking through,
you slip into a mysterious place where you’re simultaneously at one with the
elements and aware of the need for protection from such overwhelming
forces. It’s a funny mental trick: making you conscious of the innate human
need for comfort, and thus demanding a heightened awareness (and greater
appreciation) of your architectural surroundings. In this way, the designers
draw attention to their work by diverting it to something else. Such spaces
pay homage to Immanuel Kant’s distinction between the fleeting nature of
one-note beauty and the more enduring splendor of the sublime. “Beauty
alone doesn’t hold your interest for very long,” says Andersson. “You want
things to be a little…scary. But the kind of awe that derives from nature is
extraordinarily tranquil.”
Take Andersson-Wise’s design of Stone Creek Camp in Bigfork,
Montana, a rural retreat for a Tucson-based couple. Spread over fifteen
acres, the getaway comprises eight structures alighting a steep slope: a
gatehouse, main residence, guest cottage, communal lodge, a pair of docks
(one for boats, one for swimming), and the property’s original cabin. The site
overlooks Flathead Lake, an expansive, glassy surface that reflects its verdant
environs. “The lake is very powerful,” says Andersson. “Even when you
can’t see it, you sense it.” The largest freshwater lake west of the Mississippi
River, it is thirty-two miles long and fifteen wide—which translates to a lot of
open sky. “The light in Montana stops you in your tracks. At twilight, misty
clouds blow across the lake and everything blooms pink.”
A project of such scope put Andersson-Wise’s institutional background
to good use. Here, they sketched out a master plan to make individual
buildings seem connected but still private, so the compound feels like an
integrated village. “Each is designed like a geode: thick and solid on one

48 Natural Houses
side and open on the other,” Andersson explains. The “thick” sides, with
fewer and smaller windows, face up the hill, ensuring that buildings further
up the slope can’t see in. And, more importantly, that their lake view—the
“open” side—is not compromised by bright lights below.
The various structures are arranged to take advantage of natural
clearings, avoid razing trees, and leave flowing rivulets undisturbed. Passive
solar strategies help reduce the drain on heating, air conditioning, and
other mechanical systems. Windows, for instance, are positioned to take
advantage of shade and cross breezes in the summer and suck in warmth in
cooler months. “We have designed environmentally conscientious buildings
from the outset,” notes Andersson. Nature is a muse, but she is also a force
to be respected.
One enters the property via a two-part gatehouse capped by a
butterfly roof. The barn—which houses a garage, mechanical equipment,
and a workroom—is clad in ebony-stained wood siding that melds into
the landscape. Steps lead down to the lodge—actually a cluster of three
buildings sheltering an outdoor living room. In addition to housing common
functions like cooking, laundry, and exercise facilities, the entire main floor
is devoted to open-air living. On two sides, a grid of screens takes the
place of solid walls. Other windows dissolve on command. The dining
room’s huge glass planes open via a pulley system devised by frequent
collaborator Turner Exhibits, renowned for fabricating inventive kinetic
elements: as the glass slides down a track and drops out of sight, a
counterweighted handrail rises up. (They only want the effect of a death-
defying overlook, not the real thing.) Reclining in a wicker armchair at
sunset, in the company of a warm summer breeze, you’d think you were on
a covered porch. “We like to confuse the barrier between the natural and
the manmade,” says Wise.
A short walk away, the two-story cabin where guests actually stay is
distinguished by a similarly porous boundary. Each of the three bedrooms has its
own sleeping porch should one prefer a plein air snooze. Indeed, almost every
room throughout the property annexes an adjacent covered space, which not
only doubles the square footage during warmer months but also intensifies the
relationship with the lake. Interiors by Mimi London reinforce that connection;
she chose finishes and fabrics in sage and ochre to mimic the surrounding
greenery. “Half the time guests don’t know if they are inside or outside—you
really are fooled,” London explains. “There is more to the property than just the
lake; this lets you feel the architecture in its entire context.”

49 Renzi / Super Natural


Stone Creek Camp’s centerpiece is the main house, whose facade is
crafted from what appears to be stacked firewood. “This was our rebellious
answer to our clients’ request for a traditional log cabin,” says Wise. A
zigzagging staircase of bent steel ascends from a boulder-strewn garden to
a green roof, which—when seen from above—makes the building dissolve
into the hillside. With its elemental geometry, expressive surfaces, and
lack of overt references to traditional residential architectural forms (nearly
invisible windows, a hidden entryway), the design has the effect of an
earthwork—a monumental sculpture in the tradition of Robert Smithson or
Walter De Maria. “We thought of it as a piece of environmental art,” notes
Andersson.
Inside, the palette is almost disarmingly simple: vertical-grain Douglas
fir ceilings, plate steel countertops, painted cabinetry, fireplaces of stacked
stone. The rooms themselves prove surprisingly intimate for what appears,
from the outside, to be quite a monumental space; the living room ceiling is
just eight feet high. “We had Rudolph Schindler’s own house in mind,” says
Andersson. “It feels quite cave-like and sheltering.” He credits this largely to
the juxtaposition of London’s French-inflected industrial-chic décor against
the rough-hewn architectural backdrop. Sleek steel tables and quirky ’30s
light fixtures intermingle with Adirondack chairs and custom wicker pieces
inspired by old lodge furniture. “Arthur and Chris’s use of material and
scale is so powerful,” says London. “I wanted to make sure that the spaces
felt approachable and not overwhelming.”
As with most of Andersson-Wise’s projects, the design and placement
of windows greatly inform the spatial experience. Where perpendicular
log walls intersect, they pull apart to make room for full-height planes of
glass, which seem to offer a portal to the elements, rather than a buffer from
them. A frameless floor-to-ceiling window beside the living room fireplace
appears open to the outdoors. A steel window cut into the adjacent wall
was designed to store cordwood; removing a log invites the impression
that you are pulling it right out of the facade. Above, a small spirit window
deeper than it is tall grabs flashes of eastern light.
Opposite is a row of eight-foot-high sliding glass walls opening to a
covered terrace curtained in white hemp. The drapes can be drawn shut
against the sunset glare, further blurring the line between indoors and out.
“Summer days here are long; you get a powerful blast of sun to the south
between 6 and 10 PM,” says London. “But the light is so riveting in this part

50 Natural Houses
51 Project
of Montana that you want to enjoy it any way you can.” For this reason, the
sliding panels are left open in the winter, too. “The clients just light a fire
and wrap up in a bearskin,” says Andersson. “That, to me, is what prospect
and refuge is all about: communing with nature then retreating back into a
room that’s still engaged with the view, but elevated above the ground so
you feel safe.”
The partners relish the exquisite tensions between the grand and the
intimate, the monumental and the personal. This quality, says London, is a
byproduct of Andersson-Wise’s exactitude. “When I joined the project, Arthur
handed me about thirty pounds of blueprints—their work is that thorough
and refined,” she continues. “Their spaces may appear to be simple, but
they are surprisingly complex.” She pauses. “I think the design has to be that
complicated and controlled to feel that simple and powerful.” Although rooms
segue into one another seamlessly to invite the impression of continuity and
flow, subtle changes in ceiling height and proportion, for instance, conspire
to make each space feel quite different when you are in them.
That spatial complexity is the legacy of Charles Moore, who mentored
both partners.
Moore’s artistic exuberance is best understood by visiting his
expressionistic Austin home. The property, including part of a courtyard
complex that once housed living quarters and the firm’s original studio, is now
owned by Moore’s foundation. Everything in Moore’s house is exactly as the
fantasist left it, the product of an unbridled imagination. Walls are painted
in overbold hues. Every surface is covered in curios. Panels of speckled tin
line numerous walls. The kitchen is “carved” entirely from faux-marble plastic
laminate. “He had an unparalleled sense of theater,” notes Wise.
It was while working together on projects with Moore in Austin
that Andersson and Wise discovered their shared values and creative
compatibility. Since founding their firm, they have built a body of work
that is uniquely their own—one that honors Moore’s legacy by synthesizing
his humanism and intelligence with a strong sense of structural and
environmental integrity.
Their breakout project, completed in 2002, was the Chihuly Bridge of
Glass in downtown Tacoma. The 470-foot-long pedestrian thoroughfare spans
a freeway and rail lines to link the Museum of Glass with the Washington
State History Museum, which Andersson and Moore designed in 1996. The
bridge showcases glass artist Dale Chihuly’s fantastical artworks within a

52 Natural Houses
series of pavilions. One suspends clusters of his colorful creations above a
glass ceiling; passing through is like swimming underwater with a rainbow
of sea creatures. A second pavilion is walled-in by display vitrines arrayed
in a grid—a feature the partners repeated in Stone Creek Camp’s screen
windows and the Austin Lake House’s trelliswork, where the larger structural
grid of the building is replicated in miniature. The vitrines are encased in
glass, so visitors simultaneously look into them to see the artworks and through
them to survey the surrounding cityscape. The project was both well received
and widely published, bringing a new kind of attention to the practice. It also
established what has since become Andersson-Wise’s trademark: designs
that are by turns fragile and tough, immaterial and rock solid.
One example of that duality is the Duval County home of Buddy and
Ellen Temple, on the southern tip of Texas. This is ranch country: prize deer,
quarter horses, and Tennessee Walkers roam the sprawling 11,000-acre
property, dotted with mesquite and oak trees that sprout from blossoming
meadows. Ellen, who sits on the board of the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower
Center, has been slowly restoring the prairie’s natural vegetation (and its
butterfly population) since the couple purchased the site fifteen years ago;
stewardship of the land was thus central to the architectural program. “The
goal was to build something tethered to the site,” Andersson explains.
Built from earthen bricks, a trio of low-slung houses quotes the
deceptively elemental buildings of Bay Area modernist William Wurster,
a major influence on Charles Moore—and, by extension, Andersson and
Wise. That unassuming quality made sense here. “You don’t make moves
just to make them down here,” Andersson explains. “The design is very
pragmatic.” Adds Wise: “The materials are all rough-hewn and textured,
epitomized by the wood-mold bricks handmade just across the border in
Mexico.”
The natural beauty here, Andersson notes, is subtle rather than
dramatic. “What’s dramatic is the sense of openness.” And, of course,
the climate: “It’s hotter there than you can imagine, even with prevailing
winds from the southeast.” Accordingly, the design is all about shelter and
shade. Deep roof overhangs create comfortable porches; 110-degree
afternoons are bearable thanks to breezes cooled by the concrete-edged
pools beyond. Clerestories tucked below the tin roofs offer peek-a-boo views
while screening direct light. In the main house—called the cottage—poured-
concrete floors and plaster-skimmed walls feel cool to the touch and soften

53 Renzi / Super Natural


54 Natural Houses
the bright sun. “The architecture is defensive by design: fortresslike, with
thick walls punctured by tiny windows framing very specific vistas,” says
Andersson.
Fortresslike as they may seem when viewed from the vantage of the
hot tub, inside the structures have an unexpected sense of openness. They are
like two houses in one: a glass box, enveloped in floor-to-ceiling windows,
that’s been nested within a shell of brick and straight-grain pine. Mediating
the two is a moat of space negotiating indoors and out: covered patios,
light wells, screened-in porches. The architecture is both open and closed,
sleek and textured, exhibitionist at the core—yet outwardly self-effacing.
Unlike many firms with multiple principles, both Andersson and Wise
contribute to every project. Their collaboration is a pas de deux that marries
fine art and exquisite craftsmanship. “The initial ideation is a back-and-
forth,” says Andersson. “But then I take the lead on composing the form
and Chris burrows down and makes sure that what we do is craft. When
we’re working together, we are each in our element, firing on all cylinders.”
While each partner has his area of expertise, both are equally engaged
in concept and execution, composition and detailing, and toggle back and
forth seamlessly between scales.
The partners evolve designs by hand, eschewing computer renderings
in favor of paper and pen. Andersson uses watercolor to capture the vibe
of the project as well as its massing and volume. The medium, with its
washy brushstrokes, lets him tease out the atmospheric quality he wants to
achieve. “The act of painting forces me to figure out the light in a way that
two-dimensional drawings just can’t,” he explains. “Elevations and sections
come only after we’ve designed three dimensionally—they are not the means
to organize our ideas.” Wise then uses the watercolors to guide his own
elaborate drawings. This marriage of big picture and small scale results in
incredibly resolved spaces. No matter where your eye lands—a hinge, the
joint between two materials—you notice superbly considered detailing.
Obsessing about minutiae doesn’t end at the drawing board. Much
is refined and finessed on-site. Take Stone Creek’s stacked-firewood walls.
“Once we decided to use logs in cross section, we had to figure out how
it could function as an insulating wall,” Wise recalls. He collaborated with
the contractor to make four-by-four-foot mockups testing various stacking
and bonding methods. “Originally we were going to use chinking—the goo
that holds logs in place in traditional log-cabin construction—to act as the

55 Renzi / Super Natural


moisture barrier,” he explains. “But it took up too much visual space.” Thus
the decision was made to split the logs and make a tighter fit with fewer gaps
between. In the final design, logs are stacked on either side of an insulated
structural wall whose exterior is sheathed in a waterproofing membrane.
Each log is individually fitted and mechanically fastened to the wall, made
of steel columns supporting a steel box frame. This configuration preserves
the effect of stacked logs, while resulting in a weather-tight interior.
Solutions like this speak volumes about Andersson-Wise’s thoughtful
approach. Tellingly, both partners find greater inspiration in art and
literature than in the canon of architectural history or the polyglot stew of
contemporary culture. Conversations with Andersson-Wise about their work
bring forth references to agony in J. M. W. Turner’s watercolors, descriptive
language in Italo Cavino’s Invisible Cities, Roderick Nash’s essays on
depictions of landscape in American art, or the sense of light in seventeenth
century Dutch paintings. Michelangelo’s unfinished marble sculptures, for
instance, inspired the House above Lake Austin, built on a high, rocky bluff
overlooking the water. The low structure has chunky masonry walls skimmed
with light-catching plaster; the effect is of a clean-lined volume being pushed
out of a wild landscape. “Many sculptors carve out an overall shape and
then continually refine it; Michelangelo, in contrast, would carve a perfect
arm out of a rough block of marble—and then move onto the next body
part,” says Andersson. “That is what Chris and I aspired to here: this smooth
stucco building that appears to be chiseled directly out of the rock.” A
highbrow reference? Sure. But not highfalutin. “The power of art is not
appreciated solely on an intellectual level,” he continues. “You can only
take it in if you’re emotionally invested.”
Emotional investment is the key to understanding Andersson-Wise’s
architecture. Their work mainlines into your senses. You feel these spaces.
They are wonderful to be in, full of light and atmosphere. They are not
theoretical exercises; indeed, the only message their buildings seem to offer
is: Design can be this good! For this reason, the partners blanch at the
term postmodernists even while they grudgingly embrace it. “We do have a
concern for spatial complexity and light play that is rooted in premodernist
traditions,” says Wise. “But postmodernism is such a loaded topic in
architecture and, like all movements, presumes a certain ideological agenda.
I dislike when architects talk about what their work means or the ideas it may
manifest. We’ve always resisted that; ideology doesn’t move us.”

56 Natural Houses
This puts them at odds with today’s culture of chest-beating starchitects
more concerned with Big Ideas than with making spaces people want to hang
out in. Within this context, Andersson-Wise has a radical agenda indeed:
imbuing day-to-day activities with poetry and awe. They are proposing
a new way of living that’s more in tune with the environment—and your
psyche. Their designs address pragmatic needs but also a psychological
yearning for refuge and contemplation, centering and escape, joy and
comfort. And mental breathing room: “Good architecture leaves plenty of
room for the mind to wander,” says Andersson. “It’s why I love ruins. I
think it was Ruskin who said that the unfinished quality of ruins creates a
blank space for you to complete with your imagination.” Andersson grew
up exploring the San Fernando Valley’s half-built missions and the remains
of old adobe houses. Later, while studying architecture in London, he spent
weekends visiting the crumbling castles of rural England. “I loved how
materially evident they are—there was so much mass and density to them.”
Appreciation for these remnants of the past even inspired Andersson-Wise’s
design of Temple Ranch: the main house is sited so that the living spaces
overlook the skeletal foundation of the property’s original 1850s structure,
built from sillar stone—a kind of local masonry that bears the falling-apart
look of early Roman buildings.
Andersson sees ruins not as a symbol of destruction, but as proof
of how well architecture can resist the ravages of Father Time, when
painstakingly crafted in regionally appropriate, aesthetically timeless
materials—a lesson they apply to their own practice. These homes are
heirloom pieces, meant to be passed from generation to generation. They
linger not just on the earth but also in your memory—leaving an impression
long after you’ve walked away.

57 Renzi / Super Natural


House Above Lake Austin
Austin, Texas, 2002

Spanish Colonial Revival buildings trace their origins from the hot climates
of Moorish Spain and North Africa to Mexico and California. They are
characterized by masonry and stucco walls, which absorb heat and reflect
light to create cool, dark, quiet refuges from the sun.
This house above Lake Austin represents a modern transformation of
the environmentally responsive Spanish style. Sited on a cliff, with terraces
that descend a steep hill, the building’s simple materials celebrate the site
and climate not by drawing attention to them, but by blending in. The stone
foundation of this house similarly is tied to the natural stone of the mountain.
Smooth plaster walls above the foundation appear to have been chiseled
from the rock itself. Out of the rough-hewn rock above the river comes a
sculpted domicile. The exterior walls are gray, burnished stucco, and interior
walls are a creamy, natural plaster. But the initial appearance of simplicity is
misleading.
A sheltered entry, one of the few visible apertures on the front facade
of the building, leads into a foyer flanked by the living room and dining room.
High, small windows illuminate the interior of the building, but are configured
so the sun only rarely shines directly into them. During the course of the day,
natural light defines how the house is used. Morning light illuminates the
kitchen and breakfast area and transforms the living room into a soft, golden
hue in the evening. Deep recesses within the exterior walls allow rooms to be
sunny in the winter and shaded in the summer. The plan configuration is subtly
shifted and the ceiling plane shaped to allow light to bend and trace deep into
the interior spaces of the house. The result is light that changes constantly as
it plays on the plaster walls that define each space. One is drawn from room
to room by illuminated surfaces punctuated with deep shadows. Similarly,
from the exterior, deeply recessed openings contrast with large wall surfaces
brightly illuminated by the sun.
Floor to ceiling sliding wooden doors add to the drama and allow
the owners to regulate air-conditioned space, room by room. The size of the
house, therefore, is easily transformed, depending on how many people are
using it. This is a boon in the summer months, when every effort to improve
the efficiency of cooling systems is necessary.

View of lower terrace and north facade of master suite

overleaf:
View of entrance from garden
58 Natural Houses
59 Project
60 Natural Houses
61 Project
Entrance

62 Natural Houses
(counterclockwise from top):
Entry from driveway
Window detail
Entrance detail

63 House Above Lake Austin


(counterclockwise from top):
Living room
Living room alcove
View to dining room

opposite:
View through stone window from living room

64 Natural Houses
65 Project
66 Natural Houses
Dormer at dusk opposite:
Butler’s pantry lit by dormer

67 House Above Lake Austin


View of north facade

68 Natural Houses
(counterclockwise from top):
Detail of stone window
Stone window
Stairs to terrace

overleaf:
View looking south at dusk

69 House Above Lake Austin


70 Natural Houses
71 Project
16

15

14 14
13
1 Bedroom
2 Family room
3 Future bedroom
4 Elevator
2 5 Storage
6 Sewing room
7 Utility
12 8 Bathroom
10
9 Foyer
11 10 Living room
9
11 Dining room
12 Garage
13 Kitchen
14 Terrace
15 Master bedroom
16 Balcony
Ground-floor plan
N

0 5’ 20’
20’

14

1 1
2

6 4 Site section
0 30’ 60’
3

1 Entry
2 Powder Room
5
8 7 3 Terrace

House Above Lake Austin lower-floor plan 1 2 3

Section
0 30’ 60’

72 Natural Houses
(counterclockwise from top):
View of north facade at dusk
West facade
View to lake from lower terrace

73 House Above Lake Austin


74 Natural Houses
(counterclockwise from top):
View looking north from terrace
View looking north from second-floor balcony
View of lake from terrace

opposite:
View of stairs from lower terrace

75 House Above Lake Austin


Stone Creek Camp
Bigfork, Montana, 2008

This remote Montana compound is entered gradually by descending a narrow


gravel road through the deep vegetation of a northern primordial forest.
About a mile into the pilgrimage, the forest opens to a dramatic expanse of
land, sky, and water. Flathead Lake reaches into the distance. A pair of stark,
substantive gatehouses greets the visitor, while the arrangement of buildings
in the camp below embodies the notion of prospect and refuge as put forth
by the English geographer Jay Appleton in his book The Experience of
Landscape. It is the unexpected opportunity to see combined with the ability
to hide in a protected space that reinforces aesthetic satisfaction. Being
here, one can experience the lake, with its view, grandeur, and promise.
At the same time, the rooms of these structures provide an intimate sense of
being in a protected place.
The Camp is situated along a sloping hill, leading visitors to discover
the site progressively. From the gatehouses, a pebble and earth path leads
down the hill to the Master House, the Main Lodge, and the Guesthouse. The
buildings offer warm, almost cavelike spaces as well as expansive porches,
open to the sunlight and views. They are designed to let people feel the
natural environment, indoors and outdoors. Small windows and thick walls
facing into the slope of the site are contrasted with entire walls that open up
toward the lake. The two-foot-thick cordwood wall on the upper side of the
Master House is constructed with a double wythe of wood and an insulated
waterproof layer in the middle. The cordwood is dry stacked and attached
to the center insulated wall using blind fasteners. The result is a commodious
structure connected materially with the site. Inhabitants may choose to be
outdoors while inside by sliding open the walls and moving outside to
spaces that are more civilized than the outlying wilderness. Similarly, with
each bedroom’s separate, screened-in space, it is always possible to sleep
in nature and yet still be secure within the building.
The materials and textures of the buildings connect them to the site.
Like the lake, they feel as if they have been—and will be—here forever. The
effect is paradoxical: despite their size, the camp’s large structures seem to
emerge from the rock, wood, and grasses that surround them.

View from above Master House looking west toward Flathead Lake

76 Natural Houses
77 Project
Master House (counterclockwise from top):
Entry courtyard at dusk
Entry courtyard looking northwest
North facade of courtyard

78 Natural Houses
Stone and cordwood wall detail overleaf:
Master House, entry courtyard

79 Stone Creek Camp


80 Natural Houses
81 Project
1 Master House
2 Lodge
3 Guesthouse
4 Gatehouse
5 Swim dock (future)
6 Boat dock

5
4

N
Stone Creek Camp site plan
0 25’ 50’ 100’

82 Natural Houses
1 Sitting room
2 Terrace
1 2

Master House section


0 20’ 40’

1 Entry
2 Sitting room
3 Kitchen
4 Office
5 Terrace
6 Master bedroom
7 Sleeping porch
8 Master bathroom
9 Master closet
10 Outdoor shower 1

4 10
9 9
4 2 3
8

5 6 10

Master House ground-floor plan


N

0 5’ 10’ 20’

83 Stone Creek Camp


Master House (top to bottom): opposite:
Sitting room Kitchen detail
Kitchen

84 Natural Houses
85 Project
86 Natural Houses
Master House outdoor shower opposite:
View of Master House roof from south

overleaf:
87 Stone Creek Camp Master House west facade
88 Natural Houses
89 Project
Master House, view of lake from terrace

90 Natural Houses
Master House (top to bottom):
Terrace
Terrace looking north

91 Stone Creek Camp


Master House, sleeping porch looking north opposite:
Sleeping porch looking south

92 Natural Houses
93 Project
(clockwise from top):
Approach to Gatehouse
Gatehouse roof detail
Steel sign at private drive

overleaf:
Guesthouse second-floor sleeping
porch looking south

94 Natural Houses
1 Exercise room
2 Bathroom
3 Outdoor living room
4 Living room
5 Mud room

4 5 2
3

1 2

Lodge section
0 5’ 10’ 20’

1 Sleeping porch
2 Bedroom
3 Kitchen
4 Outdoor sitting room

1 1

1 2 4 3

Guesthouse section
0 5’ 10’ 20’

95 Stone Creek Camp


96 Natural Houses
97 Project
6

16
ELEVATOR

4 3

1 Entry
2 Living room
3 Dining room
4 Screened room 7
5 Outdoor living room
6 Terrace
7 Pantry
8 Kitchen
8
9 Breakfast nook
10 Mud room
11 Laundry 11 10
12 Wrapping room
13 Vestibule
14 Exercise room 9
15 Storage/Mechanical
16 Elevator

Ground-floor plan

14
12
13

15
16

Lodge basement plan


N

0 5’ 10’ 20’

98 Natural Houses
Lodge (top to bottom):
Indoor outdoor dining room
Crank mechanism for moveable wall

99 Stone Creek Camp


Lodge, dining room window and balcony in closed position

100 Natural Houses


Lodge, dining room window and balcony in open position

101 Stone Creek Camp


Guesthouse barn door detail

102 Natural Houses


Guesthouse (clockwise from top):
View looking northwest
Outdoor shower
Southwest corner

103 Stone Creek Camp


3 3
4 4

Second-floor plan

1 Kitchen
2 Outdoor sitting room
3 Bathroom
4 Bedroom
5 Sleeping porch
6 Breakfast room

5 3 2 6

4
1

N
Guesthouse ground-floor plan
10' 0 5’ 10’

104 Natural Houses


Guesthouse (top to bottom): overleaf:
Second-floor sleeping porch looking west Boat dock on Flathead Lake
Outdoor sitting room

105 Stone Creek Camp


106 Natural Houses
107 Project
On the Salubrity of Sites:
The Residential Architecture of Arthur Andersson and Chris Wise
Frederick Steiner

The houses designed by Austin-based architects Arthur Andersson and Chris


Wise accomplish twin apparently competing goals. Their buildings appear
contemporary, evoking ideas and feelings about our current condition,
while fitting seamlessly into the environments that they inhabit. The work
appears as if it has always been there, imbuing its context with a sense of
participation.
Fresh out of architecture school at the University of Kansas, Andersson
met Charles Moore in the late summer of 1980. Moore later chose
Andersson to be his and William Turnbull’s assistant during the building
of the Wonderwall at the 1984 Louisiana World Exposition. After Moore
moved to Austin to become the first O’Neil Ford Chair at The University of
Texas, he invited Andersson to manage his new office there.
Moore and Andersson envisioned a Texas Taliesin and bought a piece
of property in the heart of Austin to realize that vision. They set up a make-
shift office in Moore’s living room and added a design studio, transforming
the house into a compound. The studio was established around a dedicated
group of architects that included Chris Wise, who had earned a degree
from the University of Texas at Austin in 1987. In this context, Andersson
and Wise began their careers under the tutelage of a mentor who devoted
much of his life to the design of houses.
Chris Wise worked with Moore/Andersson Architects until 1991,
when he went to work for Donlyn Lyndon, one of Moore’s original partners
at MLTW, in Berkeley, California. He later received a Master of Design
Studies from Harvard in 1995 and then returned to Austin to work with
Andersson. Even after Moore passed away in 1993, the firm remained
Moore/Andersson until 2001, when Wise became a partner and the name
was changed to Andersson-Wise Architects. Their work came to distinguish
itself from that of Moore.
“We studied alternative strategies,” Andersson declares, “and
became drawn to materials of consequence, materials that look better, not
worse, over time.”
As a result of their interest in what it takes to be comfortable in a given
climate, the material quality of the buildings is palpable. Their buildings are

108 Natural Houses


situated with careful consideration for how they will age. The fascination with
how buildings can withstand time has drawn Andersson to look closely at
ruins. “With ruins,” he notes, “you can fill in the spaces left blank by time.”
Following Moore’s death, much of the firm’s work focused on residen-
tial projects. Their houses, like ruins, provide a canvas where the residents
fill in the open spaces. A residence in the foothills of the Catalina Mountains
near Tucson, Arizona, designed in Moore/Andersson’s last years, stands
out in its response to climate and context. Connie and Martin Stone’s home,
completed in 1995, minimizes energy consumption by using the opportuni-
ties and constraints of its harsh, yet beautiful, surroundings. An evaporative
cooling system combined with massive adobe walls, and careful orientation
to capture breezes within the desert climate. The house offers expansive
views of the city of Tucson on one side and the Catalina Mountains on the
other. The large openings that engage these views are in alignment with
prevailing breezes. The architects took on energy and environmental con-
cerns with this house before the recent rapid expansion of interest in green
design and before the widespread application of sustainable design tools.
The Stones were so pleased with their desert home that they embarked
on a new project with Andersson and Wise, this one on the sloping shores
of Flathead Lake near Big Fork, Montana. If designing in the desert was
about protection from harsh sunlight, designing this compound in northern
Montana was an exercise in bringing sunlight into buildings and their sur-
rounding spaces. The result is four buildings carefully sited on a series of ter-
races leading to a boat dock and a future swim dock. In addition to the main
house, the complex includes a gatehouse, a guesthouse, and a lodge.
More than buildings, the structures in the Stone Creek Camp are
modified porches, open to the warmth of the sun and views of Flathead
Lake. With close consideration of terrain, the design displays masterful use
of its site allowing the outdoors and the indoors to flow together seam-
lessly. When trees were cut, the wood was reused as a building material.
For example, the master house includes stunning cordwood walls, evoking
the giant firewood piles visible across the American West. These walls are
powerful in their humility. The image is of something that is new, yet seems
to have always been there.
Flathead Lake is a glacial moraine, and the building appears to be
an outgrowth of the natural granite that inhabits the site. On the upslope
side of the site, the more solid aspects of the building are made of rocks

109 Steiner / On the Salubrit y of Sites


110 Natural Houses
and wood. The same rock wall that defines the entrance to the master house
extends to the roof through the fireplace chimney, nestled among native
stem grass. The rigorously resolved detailing of the stone walls combines
with a precise, wood framework to reveal a completely modern building
made from a traditional palette.
The grass roof of the master house is an example of the intelligent
plant use. During the summer the roof is green, blending into the forest
so that from the vantage point of the lodge and other upslope buildings,
it virtually disappears. During the autumn, the dry grass stands out like
a shaggy head of bright yellow hair. Andersson and Wise arranged the
building on the site to allow the underground springs to flow naturally to the
lake. Native vegetation helps to direct water flow and absorb stormwater as
these hearty plants have controlled water flow to the lake for centuries.
The buildings are arranged to capture sunlight and to reduce energy
use. In their Tuson House, the Andersson-Wise design minimized air
conditioning with intelligent site planning and thick walls. In Montana, the
buildings have no central heating, which Andersson calls “kinda crazy.”
Instead, fireplaces and radiant heating accomplish this goal. The overall
site plan encourages the Stones to use the outdoors, but in protected,
comfortable spaces.
Also on Flathead Lake, Andersson-Wise designed a cabin for Austin
friends Lillian and Walter Loewenbaum. The cabin is sited on a rock
outcropping on the slope below a cliff, where the ruins of old trees are home
to families of ospreys. Six hand-cast concrete piers support the structure,
hovering above the ground on stilts, and nested in the tall ponderosa pines
and Douglas firs.
Only a screen protects visitors from the elements outside this delicately
placed, handmade cabin. The structure is there for the sheer enjoyment of
viewing the avian habitat and the dramatic environment of the tall trees and
lake. The open-air, primitive hut is a return to the elements. Inside, Douglas
fir, common in western Montana creates a warm, rustic environment. The
cabin’s indigenous materials and delicate placement make it feel like it
belongs to the forest and the lake, with the osprey and the eagles, the elk
and the bear.
“I’ve always been interested in Henry David Thoreau and the
philosophy of allowing a relationship with nature to define the principles
in one’s life,” Andersson observes. “Economy was a huge part of how

111 Steiner / On the Salubrit y of Sites


Thoreau lived. And it was economy, in form, impact, and materials, that
drove the Loewenbaum cabin design. We conceived a simple palette of
wood, detailed to enable the structure to be built by hand. Two people
made this structure over a period of eight months.”
In 2002, when the American Institute of Architects, Austin Chapter,
design jury reviewed noteworthy projects, the Lake House on Lake Austin,
designed by Andersson-Wise stood out for its beauty and simplicity. The
images, including one of an exuberant boy leaping from the boathouse into
the lake, were mesmerizing. “The simplicity of this project makes it one of
the most satisfying we’ve built,” explains Andersson. The 400-square-foot
boathouse was made with three materials: ipe wood, steel, and screen. It is
an open pavilion that encourages welcome breezes from the lake. Within
the structural grid, operable panels invite a plunge into the cool waters
below.
It is a pilgrimage to get there, but a 250-foot-long suspension
bridge spanning a rocky gorge facilitates the journey. To keep the terrain
undisturbed, footings were poured from a helicopter, which made fifteen
separate trips to the site. The powerfully simple design of both elements
claims the hillside and the lakeside with structures that miraculously exist
within the rugged natural setting.
Traveling further west in Austin, one encounters a series of highland
lakes that mark the transition to the Texas Hill Country. These lakes were
developed in the 1930s as part of the Lower Colorado River Authority’s
water management program.
At Lake Travis, the largest of these lakes, a few of the early dwellings
built of Texas limestone remain. Lynwood and Su Alice Jostes spent time
at their lodge on the lake for many years and sought an addition to
accommodate visits from their children, grandchildren, and friends. Instead
of adding on, Andersson and Wise chose to construct a tower adjacent to
the historically valuable structure. The location of the new building creates
a courtyard nestled in the cedars and live oaks.
Within its 400-square-foot floor plan, the Tower House comprises
three floors with a single bedroom and bath on each and an open air
terrace at the top. Windows open to capture views and breezes from the
lake. Walking up the stairs offers snapshots of the landscape as well as
views—in, around, and through the building—before arriving at the rooftop
terrace looking out to Lake Travis.

112 Natural Houses


113 Project
Expansive views are also a feature in a residence overlooking Lake
Austin from Mount Bonnell, one of the tallest points in Central Austin. From
this high spot, the views are spectacular, not only down the cliff to the lake,
but across the Hill Country to the west. But from inside the house, the drama
of the natural context is not presented in a conventional manner. Rather,
carefully composed openings frame the panoramic scene. Several windows
display the more intimate surroundings such as nearby walls and vegetation.
A series of small terraces, built of locally quarried limestone, step down the
slope, offering changing perspectives of the hills and water beyond.
These apertures, in walls and on the roof, grab light from the west in
various ways so that natural light glows deep inside the house. Monolithic
walls made of earth-colored plaster receive this glowing light. Shaped
to accept and bend light, they create a highly sculptural architectural
experience. As with the cordwood walls at the Stones’s Flathead Lake
house, the earthy plaster walls have a material presence that celebrates the
characteristics of their place.
Walking around the house, which seems classical and contemporary
at once, there is a remarkable feeling of connection to the natural landscape.
Good site design involves learning how to read the landscape and then
applying that literacy from the outside in. All of these residences certainly
display masterful site design; however, the House Above Lake Austin best
illustrates their skill at creating interior rooms that celebrate a connection to
the landscape from within. The landscape can be read from within through
captured light and view. One is compelled to move from inside to outside
by virtue of the strength of these connections.
Over twenty centuries ago, the Roman architect Vitruvius emphasized
the importance of site design in his classic treatise, The Ten Books on
Architecture. According to Vitruvius, in a chapter devoted to the “salubrity
of sites,” the choice of a “very healthy site” was the first general principle to
be observed. He wrote, “[I]f the building is on the coast with a southern or
western exposure, it will not be healthy, because in summer the southern sky
grows hot at sunrise and is fiery at noon, while a western exposure grows
warm after sunrise, is hot at noon, and at evening all aglow.”
Vitruvius urged us to design with nature in mind, setting the stage for
what we now call sustainable design. The work of Andersson and Wise
might be characterized as sustainable or green design. Within the School
of Architecture at the University of Texas, we have ongoing debates about

114 Natural Houses


what constitutes sustainable design and whether it threatens creativity.
Good design is sustainable, one argument goes. Labels can be dangerous,
because they tend to pigeonhole architects into a style, be it modernism,
postmodernism, or green architecture.
My view is that good design is indeed sustainable. Arthur Andersson
and Chris Wise help bridge the supposed divide between sustainability and
good design, by focusing on permanence and energy efficiency. They display
creative and imaginative responses to specific places and programs.
Furthermore, we have no long-term choice but to build with restoration
and regeneration in mind. The energy and resource demands of buildings
are important considerations in a growing, urbanizing planet with finite
resources. Austin, Texas, with its innovative Austin Energy Green Building
program, provides an ideal base for architects to pursue designs that
address these concerns.
Architecture is rooted in experiment and experience. Each
Andersson-Wise project experiments with new forms, especially suited for
a specific place. With every new residential project, the firm’s experience
in sustainable design—an architecture of permanence—has deepened and
been enriched. Working with site-cast concrete, locally quarried stone, or
indigenous wood, their experiments expand upon their sustainable roots
with increasing boldness.
Andersson-Wise illustrates that high-quality distinctive design can be
built to last. They have grown beyond their postmodern roots but continue to
display a respect for place, context, and precedent. Their work neither shuns
ornament nor adds superficial embellishment. Rather, their work captures the
essence of a place, while contributing new meaning and understanding.
According to a Brookings Institution study conducted by Arthur Nelson,
the United States is facing an unprecedented need for new buildings. Nelson
projects that by 2030, half of the buildings where Americans live, work,
and shop will have been built since 2000. We will clearly need to build
more homes and build them in a more responsible, energy-efficient manner.
Over the next twenty-five years, we will need architecture that connects us to
our past and to our place, yet stimulates our senses. The work of Andersson-
Wise guides the way toward an architecture that engages the natural world
in a meaningful manner.

115 Steiner / On the Salubrit y of Sites


Collector’s House
Austin, Texas, 2002

Set in the rolling hills of west Austin, the Collector’s House is surrounded by a
seductively private landscape full of gentle slopes and dense foliage. Its low-
slung, wooden structure seems almost to recede into the shadows created
by deep porches and tree shade. It was apparent as we spent some time
inside that the sunlight from a series of overhead skylights was uncomfort-
ably bright. This, combined with the fact that only a few windows allowed
a connection to the trees outside, made an environment that was open and
overly bright on the inside, yet closed to the outside. We worked to reverse
this effect, softening the light from the sky by bending it around new surfaces
at the ceiling level, and removing obstructions to the exterior views.
This renovation consisted of sculpting new space, focusing light on
surfaces, and playing with its effects. The goal was to make the house into
a gallery for the client’s art collection and divide the rooms themselves
into pictorial compositions. By creating protected spaces, where the light
is brought in selectively, the rooms now impart a sense of calm and quiet.
Every object is illuminated and infused with natural light, mysterious yet well
defined. Within this minimal approach, niches, shelves, and alcoves exist
to make carefully composed locations for artwork. The design focuses on
surface color and texture. The palette consists of two materials: plaster and
the neutral dark tone of the ebonized wood floor. Carefully placed windows
and walls allow sunlight to define the shape and character of the rooms.
Walls and ceilings adhere to a simple aesthetic. The new experience in
this home is reminiscent of the works of Jan Vermeer, whose quiet paintings
evoke a certain lifelike serenity.

Living room and stair to loft

116 Natural Houses


117 Project
Entry stair detail

118 Natural Houses


(top to bottom):
View of pool and deck from east
View of spa pavilion from east

119 Collector’s House


Interior renovation
Exterior renovation
Existing
4
6
7
9 13
2 10

1
8 15
3 5
12
14
16
6
16

11
17
15
6

18

1 Entry
2 Master bedroom
3 Master bathroom
4 Powder room
5 Study
6 Closet
7 Living room
8 Dining room
9 Kitchen
10 Butler’s Pantry
11 Screened porch
12 Exercise room
13 Family room
14 Office
15 Bedroom
16 Bathroom
17 Hot tub
18 Pool

N
Collector’s House site plan
0 20’ 40’

120 Natural Houses


Pool sitting area and fountain overleaf:
View of pool from entry

121 Collector’s House


122 Natural Houses
123 Project
Renovation 4
Existing

1
1 Guest loft
3
2 Bathroom
3 Mechanical room 2
4 Open to below

N
Collector’s House upper-floor plan
0 20’ 40’

1 2

Collector’s House section 1 Living room


2 Dining room (beyond)
0 25’ 50’
3 Guest loft 0 25' 50'
4 Pool

124 Natural Houses


(clockwise from top):
Entry terrace looking east
Entry terrace
Screen porch

125 Collector’s House


(counterclockwise from top):
Tapestry detail
Living room
Living room detail

opposite:
Living room

overleaf:
Living room

126 Natural Houses


127 Project
128 Natural Houses
129 Project
(left to right):
Master bathroom
Powder room

130 Natural Houses


Entry

131 Collector’s House


Temple Ranch
Duval County, Texas, 2009

The primeval qualities of nature, the sun and wind, broad sky and rocky
hard earth define the experience of South Texas. Everything that exists in
this environment is essential. Trees, scrub, and wildflowers have evolved to
subsist on little water, withstand a scorching brilliant sun and icy winds from
the north. Life here must have a purpose in order to exist.
As nature would have it, this environment is home to a bountiful
population of native quail and deer that has been deemed some of the best
in the southwest. Our project, known as the Temple Ranch, is the seasonal
retreat for Buddy and Ellen Temple, who have for two decades passionately
worked to manage, restore, and preserve the native habitat of this place.
Their building program outlined the importance of making buildings that
promote both social interaction and quiet contemplation. We considered
the land and the gentle sloping terrain, the natural air-conditioning offered
by prevailing breezes from the southeast, and the ever-present sun. Our
observations transformed into an idea for structures that have a very tough
outer shell of locally made brick. Deep open porches seem carved out of
the exterior brick volumes, revealing transparent walls that slide open to the
rooms inside. The buildings, a cottage, two guest houses, and the existing
lodge, are organized around an open courtyard with a large swimming
pool and spa, oriented to take advantage of the prevailing breezes.

Infinite edge pool and spa waterfall

overleaf:
View of Cottage looking south
132 Natural Houses
133 Project
134 Natural Houses
135 Project
11

7
9 12

6
12
1

5
10
2

10
4

10

8
N
Temple Ranch site plan 1 Lodge
0 30’ 60’ 90’
2 Guesthouse Sunset
3 Cottage
4 Original 1850s structure
5 Pool
6 Guesthouse Sunrise
7 Future Gatehouse
8 Ellen’s windmill
9 Existing barns
10 Existing staff facilities
11 Main highway
12 Ranch road

136 Natural Houses


Guesthouse Sunrise (counterclockwise from top):
View looking north
West facade
View looking southeast

137 Temple Ranch


(counterclockwise from top):
Covered porch of Guesthouse Sunrise
Window to shower in Guesthouse Sunset on
north facade
North facade and covered porch of Guesthouse
Sunset

opposite:
Looking toward lodge from Guesthouse Sunrise overleaf:
covered porch Window detail and view looking south from
Guesthouse Sunrise

138 Natural Houses


139 Project
140 Natural Houses
141 Project
1 Master bedroom
1 2 Master closet
2 3 Guest bedroom
3
4 4 Guest bathroom
6
5 Living room
5
6 Porch
10 7 Foyer
8 Office
7 8
11 9 Powder room
10 Screen porch
12 11 Master bathroom
9
12 Porch
13 Dining room
19 14 Kitchen
15 Laundry
13 14 16 Mud room
17 Mechnical
18 Carport
20
19 Terrace
W.H.

20 Cooling pond
15 16 17

N
Cottage floor plan 18
0 5’ 10’ 20’

0 5' 10' 20'

1 Bathroom
2 Bedroom
3 Living room
4 Bathroom
5 Bedroom
6 Porch

1 4
3
1 Living room
2 Porch

1
5

6 2

Guesthouse Sunset floor plan Guesthouse Sunset section


N

0 5’ 10’ 20’ 0 4’ 8’ 12’

142 Natural Houses


Cottage carport

143 Temple Ranch


(counterclockwise from top):
Brick detail
Cottage window detail
Steel crosstie detail

opposite:
Cottage detail

overleaf:
Butterfly garden

144 Natural Houses


145 Project
146 Natural Houses
147 Project
Cottage (counterclockwise from top):
View looking southwest to pasture from living
room
Entry sculpture shelf
Living room looking west to master bedroom

opposite:
View from master bedroom suite to entry

148 Natural Houses


149 Project
150 Natural Houses
(counterclockwise from top):
View of Cottage from the southwest
Cottage interior screen porch
Temple Ranch at dusk

opposite:
Cottage kitchen

151 Temple Ranch


Cabin on Flathead Lake
Outside Polson, Montana, 2007

Locals call the granite and shale cliff overlooking Montana’s Flathead Lake
“The Matterhorn.” It is a place to observe the natural world: the lake, the
surrounding ponderosa pine forest, and especially the eagles and ospreys
that nest nearby. Together, the water, cliff, and trees form a classic picture
of the expansive American West, and it is clear why Montana is still known
as North America’s great destination.
Within this context, the Cabin’s diaphanous volume is set on six steel
piers delicately anchored to solid concrete foundation blocks set into the
steep slope. Large, screened walls enclose a living area, which has an open
floor plan and wooden slat floors that extend outside. Private amenities are
sparse but not neglected: a small kitchen, bathroom, and shower allow
guests to stay should the mood strike them.
The shape of the roof in profile evokes the shallow V of a bird rid-
ing an updraft. But the building defers to its setting with more than mate-
rial and aesthetic gestures. Construction workers poured the foundations by
hand; sawed boards off-site; and screwed and bolted boards and framing
together so the sounds of hammers, mixer trucks, and power saws would
not frighten the ospreys nesting nearby. Visitors must approach the Cabin
on foot as the building site is several hundred yards down a dirt road at the
base of the slope.
From the Cabin’s interior, an enveloping palette of locally harvested
wood frames views of the forest beyond. The Cabin has no heating or
cooling system and running water is pumped to the structure from the lake
below. When communing with nature is the purpose of a building, minimal
impact allows for maximum effect.

View of north facade at night

152 Natural Houses


153 Project
(counterclockwise from top):
View of lake
View of west facade
View of north facade

154 Natural Houses


View looking south overleaf:
Entry

155 Cabin on Flathead Lake


156 Natural Houses
157 Project
158 Natural Houses
(clockwise from top):
Living deck
Window detail
View looking north from living deck

opposite:
Beam detail

overleaf:
View looking north

159 Cabin on Flathead Lake


160 Natural Houses
161 Project
Living deck

162 Natural Houses


1 Bridge
2 Bathroom
3 Outdoor shower 7
4 Bedroom
5 Kitchen
6 Living deck
7 Deck

2 3

N
Cabin floor plan
0 5’ 10’

1 Bedroom
2 Bathroom

Cabin

1 2

N
Site plan
0 30’ 60’ 120’

Cabin section
0 5’ 15’

163 Cabin on Flathead Lake


(left to right):
Bedroom and bathroom
Indoor/outdoor shower

opposite:
Entry detail

overleaf:
View of west facade

164 Natural Houses


165 Project
166 Natural Houses
167 Project
(counterclockwise from top):
View of west facade
Deck looking south
Deck looking north

opposite:
View from below at night

168 Natural Houses


169 Project
View of deck from below

170 Natural Houses


(counterclockwise from top):
View of east facade from below
View of beam and osprey nest
Sunrise

overleaf:
View of lake

171 Cabin on Flathead Lake


172 Natural Houses
173 Project
Influential Texts

Appelton, Jay. The Experience of Landscape. London: Wiley, 1975.


Calvino, Italo. Invisible Cities. Italy: Giulio Einaudi Editore, 1972.
Emerson, Ralph Waldo. Nature. Published anonymously in 1836.
———. Self-Reliance, Essays: First Series. 1841.
Kant, Immanuel. Observations on the Feeling of the Beautiful and Sublime. Translated by John T.
Goldthwait. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1961, 2003.
Nelson, Arthur C., Thomas W. Sanchez, and Casey J. Dawkins. Urban Containment and Society.
Hampshire, UK: Ashgate, 2007.
Nelson, Arthur C., and Casey J. Dawkins. Urban Containment in the United States. Chicago: American
Planning Association, 2004.
Pallasmaa, Juhani. The Eyes of the Skin: Architecture and the Senses. New York: John Wiley, 2005.
Roderick, Nash. Wilderness and the American Mind. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1967.
Ruskin, John. The Seven Lamps of Architecture. New York: J. Wiley, 1849.
Schama, Simon. Landscape and Memory. New York: Random House of Canada, Limited, 1996.
Thoreau, Henry David. Civil Disobedience, Resistance to Civil Government. Aesthetic Papers, 1849.
———. Walden; or, Life in the Woods. Boston: Ticknor and Fields, 1854.
Vitruvius. The Ten Books on Architecture. Translated by Morris Hicky Morgan. Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 1914.

174 Natural Houses


Illustration Credits

All images are the authors’ unless otherwise indicated.

Frontispiece
1, Art Gray
2, Paul Bardagjy
3, Art Gray
4, Matthew Millman
5–6, Art Gray

Tower House
15–17, 19–25, 27–29, Art Gray

Lake House
31–35, 37–39, 41–45, Paul Bardagjy

Super Natural
51, 54, Art Gray

House Above Lake Austin


59–63, Art Gray
64, Matthew Millman
65, Art Gray
66, Matthew Millman
67–71, 73, Art Gray
74, Matthew Millman
75, Art Gray

Stone Creek Camp


77–81, 84–94, 96–97, 99–103, 105–107, Art Gray

On the Salubrity of Sites


110, Art Gray
113, Matthew Millman

Collector’s House
117, Art Gray
118, Matthew Millman
119, Art Gray
121–23, 125 (top and bottom left), Matthew Millman
125 (bottom right), 126, Art Gray
127–29, Matthew Millman
130–31, Art Gray

Temple Ranch
133–35, 137–41, 143–51, Art Gray

Cabin on Flathead Lake


153–62, 164–73, Art Gray

175 Illustration Credits


Project Team Credits

Tower House
Kristen Heaney, Travis Greig

Lake House
Jim Moore, Christopher Sanders

House Above Lake Austin


Tim Dacey

Stone Creek Camp


Christopher Sanders, Becky Joye, Matthew Ames

Collector’s House
Erlene Clark, Vincent Moccia

Temple Ranch
Matthew Ames, Wenny Hsu, Christopher Sanders, Leland Ulmer

Cabin on Flathead Lake


Jesse Coleman

176 Natural Houses

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