Caterpillar House

2 MIN READ

Having purchased one of 300 homesites in the Santa Lucia Preserve, the client for this custom home was adamant that the project have a strong environmental stewardship agenda but something that was unlike your typical suburban tract home. “She wanted something more contemporary,” says architect Jonathan Feldman. “She essentially wanted a modern ranch house.”

The architect gave her this low-slung open-plan house that nestles neatly into the landscape.

Santa Lucia is a 20,000-acre private development where permanent conservation deeds have been placed on 90 percent of the land. As a result, homes are restricted in size on a lot-by-lot basis, which meant that Feldman could build on only a small portion of the home’s 33-acre site.

The architect responded by designing a structure whose gentle curves respond to the contours of the site. The client had previously lived in a Cliff May ranch house and appreciated its casual California-cool style. The open plan of this house reflects her informal lifestyle, and the large floor-to-ceiling glass walls and doors offer a strong connection to the outdoors. Douglas fir millwork adds warmth to the space.

Grand Award

Category Custom home, less than 3,500 square feet

Entrant/Architect Feldman Architecture, San Francisco

Builder Groza Construction, Monterey, Calif.

Interior designer Jeffers Design Group, San Francisco

Landscape architect Joni L. Janecki & Associates, Santa Cruz, Calif.

See all of this year’s winners in the Builder’s Choice archive.

Feldman designed the home to respond to the seasons: Optimum site orientation and overhangs block heat gain in the summer. Window placements promote cooling but also allow heat gain in the winter.

“We used low-tech strategies first,” says Feldman. “We were trying to passively design the house so the client didn’t have to rely on the air conditioner.” The excavated earth was used for rammed-earth walls, which serve as a thermal mass, and a 30,000-gallon water collection system satisfies irrigation needs.

Though the architect chose low-tech strategies first, technology—such as radiant-heated concrete floors, a photo-voltaic system (that produces all of the home’s energy), spray foam and recycled denim insulation, and low-E windows—help the home achieve its LEED Platinum certification.

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