Scorpion

Project Information:

Location: Jacksonville, Oregon
Site Area: 3.00 acres
Building Area: 2700 sf

Project Description:

One of the most striking features of this Jacksonville home is the scorpion shape it takes on from the air. The look from the air, insist Jordan, happened purely by accident. A two-car portico (the tail) extends from the back of the house, covering the main entrance at the rear. The same roof line extends over the end of a clerestory to the center of the house. At this point, the house widens, and two rooms jut from either side at 30-degree angles. The front of the house, with its squarish face, forms the head, and wooden beams extend beneath the windows of each of the angled rooms, giving a claw effect.

The home is filled throughout with natural cherry wood, granite, slate, handscraped red oak flooring, a cloth wall covering made of natural grass in the guest and recreation rooms, and mosaic tile. The décor is a mix of Asian, African and 1950’s American style. Other features include a wine cellar and cigar room carved beneath the house into the bedrock to maintain cool temperatures and give the room a cave-like
feel. The cellar features a bar, low ceilings and a vented ceiling for the cigar smoke.

– A clerestory above the entrance, hall and great room. Sun shines through the windows at various points all through the day and at different angles depending on the season. This allows for a constant yet changing play of light in the house. Because it is west-facing, the clerestory allows for passive solar heating in the winter and cooling during the summer when the windows are open.

-A master bedroom extending from the house at a 30-degree able for the purpose of taking in the view of a forested valley out the main window. The room features a Jacuzzi tub near the bed, with tiled sides that have been lowered to watch television or to gaze out the window.

– A kitchen with a five seat bar that strategically faces a large flat-screen inset television high over the refrigerator. Facing the bar is a Jenn-Air down-draft gas range which allows Jordan to face his guests atthe bar and hold conversations while cooking.

-The great room, which includes the kitchen, a dining area with recessed wine racks and wine chiller and sitting area. It has at its center a see-through gas fireplace situated between two giant columns which are the main structural support of the house. All beams come into the columns which are anchored at
the ground.

-A recreation room on the ground level of the home. It features hydronic radiant floor heating and is light and bright with awning windows on every exterior wall.
-A vanishing edge pool and a waterfall that with serve to reduce auto noise from the road below create an oasis at lower level. The pool is viewed from the above by one of two cantilevered decks whose railing appears to float because it has limited structural anchors.

Project Team:

Designer: Structure Vision
Builder: Structure Vision
Engineer: Structural Solutions
Photography: Outdoor Exposure

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