Project: Lichen House
Architects: Schwartz and Architecture
Location: Glen Ellen, California, USA
Area: 3,500 sf
Photographs by: Richard Barnes
Nested in the hills of Glen Ellen, a region in northern California known for its wine production, is the Lichen House. It’s name comes from the Ramalina lichen that hangs from the mature oak trees in the area.
This single-story contemporary residence was designed by Schwartz and Architecture, an American studio whose Box on the Rock project and Shou Sugi Ban House have already been featured on our site.
What makes the Lichen House unique is its T-shaped layout that aims to maximize the interior’s exposure to the stunning landscapes around it.
The Lichen House nestles within the fog and oaks in the hills above California’s Sonoma Valley. The free-ranging branches of the site’s mature live and coastal oak trees support veils of draping Ramalina Lichen that filter sunlight, capture moisture and nutrients for their hosts, and remove pollutants from the air through photosynthesis. A hypersensitive organism, lichen retreats or dies in adverse or contaminated environments but quickly expands its net with conditions advantageous for growth. It is a bellwether for the environmental health of this unique microclimate.
This precise relationship between lichen and host provides inspiration for an architecture specifically tailored to its site – both as a response to it and as an augmentation of its best attributes. The Lichen House works in concert with nature’s mechanisms, not to mimic them blindly, but to expand our understanding and experience of them through architecture.
Lichens grow and spread to produce their own food using sunlight – they do not feed on or harm the trees they inhabit. They establish an ethos for design inspiring symbiotic, rather than dominant, relationships between built and unbuilt worlds – one that mirrors the gesture and fluidity of movement in the architecture.
–Schwartz and Architecture
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