Architecture

Brahler Residence by Robert Maschke Architects in Bay Village, Ohio

Project: Brahler Residence
Architects: Robert Maschke Architects
Location: Bay Village, Ohio, USA
Area: 1,937 sq ft
Photographs by: Eric Hanson

Brahler Residence by Robert Maschke Architects

Robert Maschke Architects have designed a unique home in Bay Village, Ohio that is most certainly going to catch your attention. As soon as you see it you will notice the green roof that immediately separates the Brahler Residence from the rest of the homes on its street then there’s the expansive interior approach that opens up more and more spaces as you enter and walk around the floors, one of which is below ground.
There is a large difference between the exterior and the interior with a lot of interesting material and color choices.

The site of the existing Brahler Residence possesses a dramatic downward slope from the street toward a brook that bisects the lot. A densely wooded perimeter provides privacy from the compact suburban neighborhood. The client wished to maintain the quaint cottage style of the existing century old shake clad structure while enhancing it with open interior spaces filled with natural light. A new master suite, gallery, and indoor/outdoor entertaining spaces supplement the existing program.

The architecture merges landscape and building surfaces, articulating the envelope of the addition while configuring the site into differentiated formal and informal spaces. The addition is situated to create courtyard spaces at multiple levels. A folding roof plane mediates between gabled and diagonally hipped roof geometries to create a dynamic vaulted interior space. Roofs and facades clad in wood shake, standing seam metal, and vegetated surfaces fold together, collapsing the distinctions between new and existing, landscape and building, façade and roof. From the street, a windowless living façade camouflages the addition’s massing, increasing privacy for the spaces beyond. Inside, one encounters an environment characterized by layered views that create subtle connections to the exterior.

Robert Maschke Architects

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