The house, a former storefront, contains an ipe-clad core contai…
The house, a former storefront, contains an ipe-clad core containing the kitchen and a powder room that separates the front and back of the house.
Tyler Engle Architects
The site plan.
Benjamin Benschneider
With its vaulted skylight, the middle of the house feels like an…
With its vaulted skylight, the middle of the house feels like an airy courtyard.
Benjamin Benschneider
The kitchen’s blackened steel “blinders” separate it visua…
The kitchen’s blackened steel “blinders” separate it visually from the pass-through to the living area.
Benjamin Benschneider
Wood cladding makes the adjacent skylit living area feel like an…
Wood cladding makes the adjacent skylit living area feel like an outdoor space.
Benjamin Benschneider
View from the dining and living room to the kitchen and the stor…
View from the dining and living room to the kitchen and the storefront foyer/office beyond at Madrona Live/Work, Seattle.
Benjamin Benschneider
The master bedroom and bath borrows light from the interior cour…
The master bedroom and bath borrows light from the interior courtyard through a clerestory.
Tyler Engle Architects
Floor plan before.
Tyler Engle Architects
Floor plan after.
Tyler Engle Architects
Project focus. Conceptual scheme.
Polished, compact, gracious: the redesign of this 100-year-old Seattle storefront offers some original ideas for urban living. Architect Tyler Engle centered the living and dining areas under a 12-foot-9-inch-by-9-foot skylight, creating the modern equivalent of the traditional courtyard house. “We tried to create a room to the sky, since things are fairly gray in Seattle,” Engle says. “As the sun passes, the light and mood change.”
An ipe-clad service core containing the kitchen and a powder room separates the “courtyard” from the glassy front of the house, which is fitted out with a foyer and a small office for one member of the couple, and can be closed off from the service core with pocket doors. At the back of the house is another office and a master suite, whose clerestory borrows the courtyard light. Materials and detailing underscore the urban nature of this live/work space: Radiant-heated concrete floors have a terrazzolike finish, and thin, blackened steel “blinders” bookend the kitchen, separating it visually from the pass-throughs on either side. The jury was impressed, praising the “clear diagram and efficient, light-filled floor plan.”