“A weekend desert residence for a family and
their dog, the Four Eyes House is an exercise in site-specific experiential programming.
Rather than planning the house according to a
domestic functional program, the building was designed foremost as an
instrument for intensifying a number of onsite phenomenal events.
Four "sleeping towers" are oriented
towards four spatiotemporal viewing experiences: morning sunrise to the
east, mountain range to the south, evening city lights to the west, and
nighttime stars overhead.
Each tower contains a compact top-floor
bedroom, sized only for the bed, and each with a unique aperture directed
towards the view.
These bedrooms are equally-sized and
unassigned, such that the family's sleeping locations can be rotated based on
each individual's desired viewing experience.
Vertical circulation within the towers is
similarly particularized (e.g. ladders, spiral stair, switchback stair, or
shallow-riser stair).
Ground-floor common spaces form a loose
connective field between the discrete tower volumes, and offer a more
permeable relationship to the landscape.
The sensations of sleeping and waking are thus
inflected by the building's foregrounding of intensified onsite experiential
events.
By sleeping in a room elevated off the ground
and open to the stars, one might inhabit a deep pocket of silence for a few
moments, and perhaps even perceive the movement of the Earth, as it slowly
rotates beneath the stars” Edward Ogosta Architecture.
The project is been select by the American
Institute of Architects to receive the 2013 Small Project Award, now in its
tenth year, established to recognize small-project practitioners for the high
quality of their work and to promote excellence in small-project design.
Location: Coachella Valley, California, USA
Architect: Edward Ogosta Architecture
Type: residential
Year: 2012
Architect: Edward Ogosta Architecture
Type: residential
Year: 2012
















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