The architecture of Bart Prince invites
rhetorical excess. Instantly recognized yet unfamiliar, its
sculpturally suggestive, structurally theatrical forms resist
description through ordinary words. Buildings are likened
to sharks and spaceships in the hope that frenzied metaphors
might express our wonder that something as mundane as a house
could ever look so exotic.
Rising diagonally above its neighbors on a suburban lot, the
Mead-Penhall Residence
is sheltered behind a northwest facade turned protectively
to the street. Concrete block, 2x6 timber framing, plywood
sheathing, stucco finish, and corrugated sheet metal make
the most of a tight budget. The main spaces pool upstairs
in a single volume, extending 100 feet and shaped in plan
and elevation by a gentle arc that modulates the interior
into different living areas. With walls of rough-sawn cedar
plywood and a ceiling measured by plywood truss joists, this
navelike room radiates outward to the horizon.
Prince's Price Residence,
in Orange County, Calif., was featured in the pages of Architectural
Record as a Record house for 1991. Prince later returned to
design an addition to the house, which is featured exclusively
on Architecturalrecord.com.