Junegrass House
Jackson, Wyoming
Completed 2021
Design Team
Brian Messana, Toby O’Rorke, Viktor Nassli, Juan Espinosa
Collaborators
Executive Architect: Ankeny Architecuture
Structural Engineer: K L & A
Mechanical Engineer: Energy 1
Civil Engineer: Nelson Engineering
Lanscape Design: Agrostis
Lighting Designer: Zerolux
How does one marshal the most traditional buildings materials and architectural details—stone, wood, pitched roofs—into a house that functions and feels distinctly modern? Working within the manifold constraints of community design guidelines, we designed a house that feels at one with its rugged mountain setting and respects the traditional character of the neighboring residences, all without compromising our fastidious approach to space planning and form-making. Inspired by the humble vernacular residences of nearby Mormon Row—a late-frontier Wyoming settlement built by members of the Church of Latter Day Saints—our design straddles the nineteenth to twenty-first centuries, resolving the potentially contradictory demands of contextual sensitivity and contemporary brio.
To lighten the visual impact of the 5,000-square-foot residence, we broke the structure down into four volumes connected by see-through glass bridges that buoy the impression of independent pavilions arrayed in a line. The house is variously clad in stained cedar and stone, again accentuating the individual identities of the pavilions. In the central volume, which accommodates the living room, dining area, and kitchen, two walls feature massive pocketing glass doors that, in favorable weather, open the interior to a generous embrace of the surrounding land and views. At the front of the house, a fire pit set beside a reflecting pool provides the ideal spot to appreciate the glow of the setting sun reflected on the mountains. On the opposite side, a courtyard created by the staggering of the pavilions contains an outdoor kitchen and dining table.
The interior of the house is crisply detailed, with wide-plank French oak floors and vertical elevations of wire-brushed oak in a warm gray stain. The juxtaposition of the two interior materials works in tandem with the cedar and stone combination on the exterior to lend an alternating rhythm to the distilled composition. Neither hopelessly nostalgic nor aggressively contemporary, the house rests on the land with probity and grace, bridging the past and present life of the American West.
Photographed by Tuck Fauntleroy
Press
2022
2021
Barnett, Zachary. “The Space Between.” Homestead (December 2021/January 2022).
Awards
2023
Winner in the Category: Private Homes. Future House International Residential Award
Winner in the category: Architecture / Housing. DNA Paris Design Awards
Winner. Residential Category. ICFF Interiors Awards
Regional Winner in the category: Interior Architecture, Greater New York. Luxe Residential Excellence in Design Awards
Award of Merit. Society of American Registered Architects, California Council
2022
Best of Year. Medium Country House. Interior Design Magazine’s Best Of Year
Bronze Winner. Architecture & Design Collection Awards
Winner. The American Architecture Award. The Chicago Athenaeum: Museum of Architecture and Design and The European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies Design Awards
Honorable Mention in Residential Architecture - Single Family. Architecture Masterprize
Shortlisted. The Plan
Award of Honor. Society of American Registered Architects, National Design Awards
Finalist. SBID International Design Awards
Honor Award. Society of American Registered Architects, National Design Awards
The International Architecture Award, Private Residence, The Chicago Athenaeum: Museum of Architecture and Design and The European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies
2021
Interior Designer of the Year, SIT Furniture Design Award