2003 Custom Home Design Awards
Custom Home, Sept-Oct, 2003 by Meghan Drueding, Shelley D. Hutchins, Bruce D. Snider
CUSTOM HOME proudly presents the winner of the 2003 Custom Home Design Awards. Thirteen inspiring projects rose to the top of a record-breaking field of of 375 entries to capture this year's honors. The 10 Merit Award winners, two Grand Award winners, and the 2003 Project of the Year are showcased in this 32-page feature. The projects were chosen by a panel of distinguished judges, all accomplished custom home professionals: They are Charles Barry, a partner in the Boston-based custom home building firm Thoughtforms; Dick Clark, AIA, principal of Dick Clark Architecture n Austin, Texas; Robert J. Gurney, FAIA, whose architectural practice is based in Alexandria, Va.; and John Lerchen, a builder of architect-design custom houses in Indianapolis. We thank them all for so generously giving their time and expertise to the Custom Home Design Awards program.
Best Overall Custom Home of the Year
Jamestown, R.I. Residence
The traditional New England concept of a main house with outbuildings gradually added on over time, known as "continuous architecture," holds an evocative power. It calls up images of harsh winters, short but glorious summers, and homeowners with an abiding respect for their land.
Architect Chris Ladds felt the allure of this housing type when talking with a client who wanted a home and art studio in Jamestown, R.I. Yet he didn't want to create a historic reproduction. "I prefer to have the design reflect the time period in which it's built," Ladds says. So he designed a three-part complex reminiscent of continuous architecture but pulled the buildings' time-honored shapes taut using a Modem vocabulary. He kept the materials, like painted board-and-batten and cedar shingles, consistent with the New England agricultural building vernacular. "Because of the familiar materials, it's one of those rare houses that's Modern but has a really comfortable feel," said a judge.
Ladds' client is a glass artist who works at home, so the house had to function as both a residence and a workplace. The idea of separate buildings lent itself naturally to this dual purpose. For the garage and artist's studio, he fashioned a 2,000-square-foot building with a curved shed roof. It sits at an angle to the 2,900-square-foot main house so that the east ends of both structures almost touch. The resulting V-shaped plan allows water views and sunlight to enter a courtyard between the buildings, A sheltered entry pavilion completes the V, linking the home and studio and providing a mud room that serves both. "The separation of different areas works really well," said one judge.
In addition to neatly dividing the live and work functions and optimizing the amount of sunlight that penetrates the building, the two-pronged plan also protects the courtyard from wind. This outdoor room is a key element of the plan; it gives the artist and his family a neutral zone that belongs to both the studio and the house.
Though the building's cheerful collection of forms appears to be simple, Ladds in fact carefully calculated each design move. "There was a method to everything," he says. The curved south wall of the main house, for example, exactly follows the sun's path throughout the day. This element helps relate the building to its site and makes for an ever-changing shadow pattern inside. The lichen-green cedar planks cladding that wall are applied in a reverse board-and-batten pattern, with the battens behind the boards instead of over them. Each window along the curve measures precisely the same width as two boards. And the screened porch at the end of the wall owes its simplicity to more behind-the-scenes ingenuity. "We wanted the porch to be as light as possible, so it contains no structural members," says Ladds. "The master bedroom above it is held up by cantilevered beams."
The home's interior proves a worthy match to its exterior, as Ladds employed cost-effective products and materials to create a dynamic atmosphere. A built-in maple bench runs the length of the curved first-floor wall. Glass plates cast by the owner form the main stairway's central baluster. Beams of engineered lumber support the living room ceiling, instead of the steel Ladds originally planned. "There's a cartoonlike quality to engineered lumber," he explains. "It looks the way somebody might paint or draw lumber Also, it's a warmer material than steel."
Ladds included an extra room lofted in a tower above the home's second floor. The room has no specific purpose, which is just what he intended. "It's a getaway," he says. The room has a view of the Narragansett Bay and makes a great spot to read, contemplate, or think about nothing at all. The judges felt the same way about it that they did about the rest of the project. Said one, "I can look at this house and find almost nothing I don't like."
--Meghan Drueding
Entrant/Architect: Lerner/Ladds Bartels, Providence, R.I.; Builder: Ray Construction Company, West Greenwich, R.I.; Landscape architect: Beckman Weremay, Wickford, R.I.; Living space: 4,400 square feet (including studio); Site: 4,4 acres; Construction cost: $95 a square foot; Photographer: Warren Jagger Photography. * For product information see page 118.
Most Recent Business Articles
- Multiple criteria evaluation and optimization of transportation systems
- Multi-criteria analysis procedure for sustainable mobility evaluation in urban areas
- A two-leveled multi-objective symbiotic evolutionary algorithm for the hub and spoke location problem
- Multi-criteria analysis for evaluating the impacts of intelligent speed adaptation
- The development of Taiwan arterial traffic-adaptive signal control system and its field test: a Taiwan experience
Most Recent Business Publications
Most Popular Business Articles
- 7 tips for effective listening: productive listening does not occur naturally. It requires hard work and practice - Back To Basics - effective listening is a crucial skill for internal auditors
- FAS 109: a primer for non-accountants - Financial Accounting Standards Board's "Statement 109: Accounting for Income Taxes"
- Design a commission plan that drives sales - Sales Commissions
- Too Young to Rent a Car? - 25-years-old the minimum age for car renting - Brief Article
- LIFO vs. FIFO: a return to the basics


