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ABOVE: The High Desert Pavilion features a vertical, rusted
steel panel-clad spine wall. It emerges on the home's back
patio, where floor-to-ceiling windows capitalize on the view.
Although the home appears to be relatively small, it has an
entire basement with a below-grade courtyard to total 3,770
square feet of living space. Contractor: J.M. Garren, Inc.
Photograph by Tom Owen
RIGHT:
Once an industrial shop space, the 1,001-square-
foot home occupies a 3,000-square-foot lot in an urban
environment. Ceilings soar 13 feet to give the tiny home a
larger feel. Smooth stucco on the new parts of the home joins
corrugated galvalume panels on the original parts of the
structure. Contractor: Timberline Construction.
Photograph by Alan Brandt Photography
FACING PAGE TOP:
ICF block walls, Fleetwood cathedral-
like windows, and a façade clad in slate shingles make
the Fox Home an intriguing example of modern architecture.
Built in three masses and connected by all-glass
hallways, the home is also a net-zero residence. Contractor:
Timberline Construction.
Photograph by Bob Woodward
FACING PAGE BOTTOM:
The south-facing patio of the
5,150-square-foot residence includes an outdoor living area
with kitchen, fire pit, and a door system that allows the entire
wall to open to the outside. Zero maintenance materials—
stucco, metal, and moisture-resistant Fundermax cladding—
protect the home in the exposed prairie environment.
Contractor: Timberline Construction.
Photograph by Peter Jahnke