Project Description
The James River House is a riverside retreat, designed as a place for three young boys to grow and learn from their surroundings. Having moved from New York City to Richmond, Virginia, the clients wanted their children to be able to explore and have a close relationship with nature. Access to dense wood and the calm and shallow portion of the James River outside of Scottsville, Virginia, made this an ideal location for this family retreat. The house is a base camp for outdoor activities, but is also a quiet place for making fires, reading books, painting in the top lit garage studio, or simply enjoying the company of family friends. Ease of use and maintenance were of great concern to the client in order to keep life cycle costs low and maximize enjoyment of the project. As parents of three with a burgeoning architecture practice, the house has been respite from all the hustle of their in-town lives and a place to reconnect with their family and the beauty of the Virginia Piedmont. There is an almost 1/2 mile long drive through the wooded site before arriving at the studio/garage, where visitors leave their cars and walk to the house, providing a feeling of hiking into the house and slowly removing them from city life. The house itself is a collection of three distinct volumes, each serving its own function. The kitchen and the living room occupies the central volume, while the attached structure houses a bedroom for the parents, as well as a bedroom for the kids with eight built-in beds for the boys and their friends. The three volumes of the house hover above a bluff alongside a bend in the James River, arranged loosely and lightly on the land like a scattered group of stones around a campfire. The arrangement of these volumes allows the visitor to slip between and through the house, opening the view to reveal light, river, and the woods. The quiet yet open interior is built around a large and flexible gathering space that can be intimate, expansive, interior, or exterior. Flanked by sleeping quarters, this central living area is at once hearth, tree house, and dining hall and is the nexus of activity for the family and the three boys who fill the house with light and motion. Due to the strategic placement of glazing, the house has a distinct front and back side, with large windows facing the river to the North, and an opaque, sheltered side facing the South. The volumes are angled away from each other on the Northern side so that the residents are provided with several different views of the James River, as well as the surrounding and enveloping canopy of trees. This design also allows the opposite side to angle inward, reinforcing the sheltered atmosphere of the South elevation and the outdoor hearth. The third volume, dedicated to guests, is detached from the main volume, yet is connected with a deck, where guests and family can enjoy good weather and take in the cycles of the seasons tucked into the canopy of the surrounding trees. The volumes promote passive cooling through cross ventilation, and the opaque South side helps the house stay cool during the summer, the most active season at the house.