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LANDSCAPE-INTEGRATED ARCHITECTURE

Architecture and Site, Designed as One

We design buildings to be connected with their landscapes. The form of the house, the placement of walls and openings, grading and planting, all belong to the same decision. Our work starts with topography, water, solar exposure, wind, and vegetation, then moves into massing, circulation, and material. The goal is not to decorate the site after the fact, but to let the site set the terms for a clear architectural response.

 

Courtyards, terraces, and shaded outdoor rooms extend the plan and make daily life more fluid. Openings are placed for light and ventilation. Rooflines and overhangs coordinate with trees and hardscape to create microclimates that reduce heat gain and improve comfort. Water is managed at the scale of the whole property, so drainage, capture, and reuse support both performance and landscape health.

 

We work with native and climate-appropriate species, durable hardscape, and a restrained palette appropriate to the site, owner, and budget.  Materials are selected for their weathering behavior and maintenance profile. The exterior assemblies are detailed with the same care as interiors, so thresholds, edges, and transitions feel continuous and resolved.

How We Shape Building and Site

  1. ​​Read the Land: study terrain, soil, hydrology, sun, wind, tree canopy, and access.

  2. Organize the site: establish outdoor rooms, paths, and drainage before finalizing the interior diagram.

  3. Develop and architectural response: place windows for daylight and cross-ventilation, size overhangs and trellises to seasonal sun.

  4. Specify the Ground Plane: use permeable surfaces, durable stone, and planted areas that manage water and heat. Incorporate Biophilic Design.

  5. Detail the Thresholds: resolve doorsills, steps, and wall bases so inside and outside operate as one system.

Featured Projects

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Climate and Performance

The responses to site and structure along with planting and landform help moderate temperature and glare. Trees and trellises provide filtered light, walls and berms handle wind, and roof geometry coordinates with rainwater capture. These decisions reduce mechanical load and extend comfort hours without mechanical input. Exterior lighting is planned for safety and atmosphere, with attention to dark-sky and energy standards.

Process and Collaboration

We begin with on-site analysis and base mapping, then develop a combined building and landscape concept. Civil, structural, and landscape consultants are engaged early, so grading, drainage, planting, and structures support one another. Permitting is coordinated for building, site, and environmental requirements. During construction, we review layout and elevations in the field to maintain continuity between plan and ground.

Applications + Use Cases

Homes on compact lots often rely on planted courts for privacy and light as a key design element. Compounds on larger sites can be organized as linked pavilions with terraces and water systems with planted gardens in between. Workplaces can integrate small courts or vistas to improve work environment quality

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