Sunday, November 9, 2008

LoveHouse




I am an architect, a builder and a developer. When I designed and built my house, the GlassHouse, in 2002, one of my childhood dreams came true. When I was a kid, I always said I would build a “green” house, and this was before any real environmental inklings existed about housing, it was strictly a house in the color of green, my favorite color. And I think I said it was to have all the gadgets that the Jetson’s house had…that was back when I was about 10 years old.

After graduating from IIT’s School of Architecture in 1989, I worked for David Hovey and got a first hand look at two of his own ultra-contemporary homes; first on Elm Street and then helping build his 2nd house on the lake. I learned about Mies’ Wolf house. I visited Mies’ Barcelona Pavilion and Farnsworth house. I met Michael and Patty Hopkins personally and visited their fantastic home many times. I love Richard Roger’s Zip House; Norman Foster’s personal un-built residence; all of Richard Meier’s homes (many I visited); and also Richard Horden’s and Tadao Ando’s work (my wife and I visited 10 Ando buildings in one day thanks to the Shinkansen and eager cabbies). There is a lineage of these “modern” homes that stretches from the 1920’s and continues to today. We are all constantly dreaming of dwellings and how we’d like to live, not only me or these and other architects mentioned here, but also everyone. Humans have been doing this “dreaming” since caves and huts were first used and invented. Provide shelter, security and foster growth…that’s what a house is for. Technology in homes has always been the most advanced it possibly it could be at any time (cavemen included). This quest for advancing the house concept seems to have stalled (today) except for an elite group of modernists. We need to continue to dream and push technology so everyone can have shelter, security and foster growth, but in a way that expresses our epoch. What does the house of tomorrow look like?

The GlassHouse is a perfect family home and is a pleasure to live in. It looks smart and modern and acts smart and modern. It is a piece of art as much as it is real estate. My wife and I will design and build a new house. We will build an environmentally effective house, using technology and concepts I have been studying recently. We will utilize geo-thermal, solar panels and other energy concepts to make a zero-energy house; the idea is to produce more energy than we use and sell the extra energy back to the grid. Every house will be doing this in 10-25 years. To be a leader in environmental design and show people “which way is forward”. We will utilize recycled materials like reclaimed wood and the sides of shipping containers (I’d also love to incorporate airplane wings, if my wife Justyna lets me). The idea is to build a new house every 7-10 years or so. Each one is an experiment and a physical expression of what I am interested in and want to learn about. I have a team of engineers and consultants who will help me makes this new house the most advanced it can be.

The new house will be called the LoveHouse…love of family and love of the environment. The new house will accommodate everything my family and I want and need in an environmentally friendly way. We will embrace each other and the earth too. We all must.

I am so proud that the GlassHouse won the 2008 American Institute of Architects Interior Architecture award.

My original GreenHouse idea became in reality the built GlassHouse, and now I am dreaming about the LoveHouse.