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The glass farmhouse

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This remote home in mountainous Oregon appears to float above the wheat fields

 Architect: Olson Kundig Architects  architecture, building, home, house, sea, sky, water, blue
 Architect: Olson Kundig Architects  cloud, cottage, farm, farmhouse, field, grass, grassland, home, house, land lot, meadow, pasture, plain, prairie, real estate, rural area, sky, gray, brown
        arctic, arctic ocean, cloud, daytime, fell, fjord, freezing, glacial landform, highland, horizon, ice, ice cap, lake, loch, mountain, mountain range, mountainous landforms, sea, sky, snow, tundra, water, winter, gray
 Architect: Olson Kundig Architects  architecture, arctic, building, cottage, home, house, sky, snow, winter, teal
 Architect: Olson Kundig Architects  architecture, floor, flooring, interior design, kitchen, lobby, real estate, gray, black
 Architect: Olson Kundig Architects  home, house, interior design, living room, real estate, window, black, white
 Architect: Olson Kundig Architects  architecture, daylighting, home, house, interior design, penthouse apartment, property, real estate, window, wood, black, gray
 Architect: Olson Kundig Architects  architecture, ceiling, daylighting, floor, home, house, interior design, living room, wall, window, gray
 Architect: Olson Kundig Architects  architecture, ceiling, daylighting, floor, flooring, house, interior design, living room, loft, table, wood flooring, black, gray
 Architect: Olson Kundig Architects  arctic, cloud, ecoregion, ecosystem, fell, field, freezing, grassland, hill, horizon, landscape, log cabin, morning, mountain, mountain range, plain, plateau, prairie, rural area, sky, snow, steppe, tundra, wilderness, winter, gray

Architect: Olson Kundig Architects From the architect: Located in Northeast Oregon, this small house was conceived as a contemporary glass box that floats atop the surrounding wheat fields. The design of the house and the accompanying wood-frame barn responds to the local vernacular of barns and farmhouses in the Pacific Northwest while responding to the client’s deep interest in the design of Philip Johnson’s Glass House. Facing south towards the distant mountains, the house adapts well to the cold, snowy winters and hot, dry summers. In the winter, the orientation takes advantage of passive solar heat gain from the low-angled winter sun; in the summer, roof overhangs and a light shelf block the high hot summer sun from entering. Large, operable windows of high-efficiency glass provide cross-ventilation cooling, lessening the house’s need for air-conditioning.

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