Project: House to the Beach
Architects: Gluck+
Location: Chicago, United States
Photographs by: Paul Warchol
Located in the northern suburbs of Chicago, the House to the Beach sits opposite a unique, monumental object – a 135 feet high temple made of white stone, symmetrically spherical and monumental. The side of the house facing the street must negotiate not only the scale and specificity of this alien architecture but also, the eclectic nature of the suburban environment while the house must negotiate a 40 foot elevation differential between the road and the lake.
From the architects: “The house consists of four levels. A two story structure, windowless on the street, contains the garage, a gym, and a guest suite. This façade is unresidential in scale, but acts as foil to the monument it faces. Almost an inversion of the opposite grand stairs that lead up to the temple entrance, the main house entry is located at the top of the stair with the spaces of the house revealing themselves on the way down to the beach below. As one descends down the processional – light filled stairway the house gives itself away, beneath the typical American suburban lawn above. The architecture creates an experience, where the whole is pieced together through one’s mental landscape of moving down and through the house.The house is about the transition from suburban streets to lakeside beach on this unusual site. There are overlapping journeys provided by the house, from working world to family life, from formal to informal, from public to private worlds.”
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