Sited along a ledge that straddles the edge of a forest, the seasonal Vermont residence takes its name from the song “Terrapin Station” by the Grateful Dead.
Ederlezi, a residence on a 16-foot-wide lot in a historic area of suburban Monterrey, conforms to strict conservation guidelines regulated by Mexico's National Institute of Anthropology and History.
With an upper level clad in dark-stained cedar siding and black corrugated metal, the two-story addition contrasts with the predominantly white stucco Spanish Colonial architecture of L.A.'s Silver Lake neighborhood.
Built at a former Boy Scout camp near Seattle, the lakeside residence features materials inspired by the forested landscape of the Pacific Northwest and the client's Danish heritage.
Commissioned by avid climbers, this Rocky Mountain residence forges a delicate connection with its sloping, wooded site near Canada's Banff National Park.