Gefter-Press House is located in the Hudson Valley in New York and was built in 2007.

The Gefter-Press is sited on a twelve-acre property accessed by crossing a quarter mile expanse of farming fields before passing into a forested site. The slow approach to the house is the initial phase of movement that instigates the organization of movement and time in the building.

A series of planar organizations, the pictorial depth of the approach and view through the house, is counter to the shallow spaces and movements of the interior where the buildings is as narrow as ten feet.

Description of the project by Michael Bell Architect

The programming of the building is coordinated with the visual depth—social relations are coordinated by floor heights, relations to grade (above, at or below grade) and diagonal vistas though the house and across the courtyard.

The buildings structural glazing system—nine by fourteen foot wide insulated glazing units—allows a gaze to pass through the private as well as public spaces. The glazing has two details: it is either flush with the building volume and projected inboard of the structural framing (on the east/west elevations) or six inches outboard of the structural framing (on the north/south elevations).

The sills are recessed two inches below floor level. The effect it to project the interior margins of the building volume outward and to asymptotically flatten the exterior view against the interior surfaces—the background is elastically pulled to the foreground and the sense of a middle-ground is diminished. The interior is precisely defined but also it dissolves  into the extended spaces and clearings in the forest. Vision is immediate and close and also distant.

The simultaneity brings the space of the forest into the immediate circumstances of private life. The house can be opened to form a single volume: the two bedrooms open with interior sliding doors that match the glazing systems and form two oculus opening: when approaching the house they form a binocular effect that bifurcates the singular vantage of the house. The minor dimensions of a relatively small building cross a threshold opening to the wider field of the site.

Text.- Michael Bell Architect.

CREDITS.-

Design Architect.- Michael Bell Architecture.
Project Team.- Michael Bell, Thomas Long, Stephen O'Dell.
Architect of Record.- Stephen O'Dell.
Structural Engineer.- Nat Oppenheimer.
Mechanical Engineer.- Alteiri Sebor Wieber LLC.
Photographs by Richard Barnes and Bilyana Dimitrova.

Read more
Read less

More information

Michael Bell is Professor of Architecture at Columbia University. Bell chairs the Columbia Conference on Architecture, Engineering and Materials and is also Director of the Master of Architecture Program Core Design Studios.

Between 2000 and 2002 Bell lead a team of architects and desginers to provide research, urban planning and design for 2100 units of mixed income housing on a 100-acre parcel of oceanfront land owned by the city of New York. The research and design was funded to assist in the city’s future planning and development goals. Bell also founded “16 Houses,” a low income housing design program in Houston, Texas.

Bell’s design work has been shown at the Museum of Modern Art, New York; The Venice Biennale; The Yale School of Architecture; The University Art Museum at Berkeley; and at Arci-Lab, France. Bell has received four Progressive Architecture Awards, and his work is also included in the permanent collection of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Bell’s recently completed Gefter-Press House (The Binocular House) is featured in the January 2008 “Metropolis” magazine and will appear with criticism by Joan Ockman in “Casabella”, and the new edition of Kenneth Frampton’s American Masterworks Houses.

Books by Michael Bell include Engineered Transparency: the Technical, Visual and Spatial Effects of Glass; Michael Bell: Space Replaces Us: Essays and Projects on the City, 16 Houses: Designing the Public’s Private House, and Slow Space. Bell is a founding editor with Yung Ho Chang and Steven Holl of the urbanism journal “32.” Bell has also served on the faculties of the University of California at Berkeley, Rice University, and has also taught at the Harvard University Graduate School of Design.

Bell is a graduate of The Catholic University of America, Washington, DC and also the University of California at Berkeley. He has received two Graham Foundation grants as well and the Emerging Voices Award from the Architectural League of New York.

http://www.visibleweather.com/
http://www.michaelbell.tel/

Read more
Published on: June 24, 2014
Cite: "Binocular House by Michael Bell Architect" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/binocular-house-michael-bell-architect> ISSN 1139-6415
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...