US Building of the Week

Lantern Studio

Flavin Architects
31. d’agost 2020
Photo: Peter Vanderwarker Photography
Project: Lantern Studio, 2019
Location: Wellesley, Massachusetts, USA
Client: Kathy and Ed Kelly
Architect: Flavin Architects
  • Design Principal: Colin Flavin, AIA
  • Project Manager: Howard Raley, AIA
  • Project Architect: Doug Ludgin, AIA
Structural Engineer: Webb Structural Services
Structural Steel: Kelley Welding
Landscape Architect: Wagner Hodgson Landscape Architects
Contractor: Brookes + Hill Custom Builders
Site Area: 0.46 acres
Building Area: 2,608 sf
Photo: Nat Rea Photography
Please provide an overview of the project.

Flavin Architects conceived a retreat built of steel, wood, and concrete. We situated the structure in an existing garden behind a Dutch Colonial home in Wellesley, Massachusetts. While it is visible from the street, the setback respects the context: suburban houses host their accessory garages behind primary dwellings. The three-story, free-standing garden building offers a sanctuary from the busy day-to-day life of the home. The structural steel frame of the building is left exposed. A mahogany screen drapes the street-facing side of the structure, creating privacy for the client and catching the dappled light that filters through the surrounding trees.

Photo: Peter Vanderwarker Photography
What are the main ideas and inspirations influencing the design of the building?

This free-standing garden building is conceived as a creative sanctuary from the busy day-to-day life of the home. Working from the idea that our best and most creative work is done in a calm space with minimal distractions, each level of the building is a retreat for the client’s creative passions of antique Vespa scooter restoration, writing, antique fountain pen repair, and vegetable gardening. The lowest level, bermed into the sloping site contains the 673-sf garage workshop to repair antique Vespa scooters. Additional covered parking is provided under an adjacent carport with exposed steel beams topped with metal corrugated roofing. On the middle floor, set a few steps above the backyard, is the only fully conditioned space, the 252-sf writer’s retreat, also serves for repairing fountain pens. The balance of the middle floor is an open-air veranda, which gets its privacy from the street by a 3-story mahogany screen. The top level is a 590-sf roof deck, providing a haven for vegetable gardening, away from deer and squirrels that plague ground-level. An outdoor dining table and chairs surrounded by planters inspires farm-to-table entertaining.

Photo: Peter Vanderwarker Photography
How does the design respond to the unique qualities of the site?

The building is placed directly behind a spectacular glacial erratic boulder. The boulder becomes the focal point of the backyard entrance while the monolithic stone stairs wind directly behind it. Low grasses are planted around the boulder, in keeping with the manicured gardens typical of the neighborhood. The landscape to the rear of the lot is left raw and wild, with rock outcroppings that nature can overtake in time.

Photo: Nat Rea Photography
Was the project influenced by any trends in energy-conservation, construction, or design?

Inspiration for the roof deck was found in the roof terrace of Villa Savoye, Le Corbusier and Pierre Jeanneret’s 1931 masterpiece. Rather than leave the third level completely exposed, the steel frame continues upward to reinforce the idea of an outdoor room.

Photo: Peter Vanderwarker Photography
What products or materials have contributed to the success of the completed building?

The east and west elevations of the steel frame are draped with a curtain of slender mahogany strips, that screen the nearby busy road from the veranda and roof deck. The appearance of the building changes throughout the day; the wood screens are back lit in the morning sun and front lit in the afternoon with dappled light filtered through the adjacent tree canopies. At night the wood screens glow like a lantern.

Email interview conducted by John Hill.

Photo: Peter Vanderwarker Photography
Important Manufacturers / Products

  • Doors & Windows: Loewen
  • Pedestal flooring system: Bison Innovative Products
  • Steel railing cables: Feeney, Inc.
  • Garage door: Garaga Inc.

Photo: Peter Vanderwarker Photography
Photo: Peter Vanderwarker Photography
Photo: Peter Vanderwarker Photography
Drawing: Flavin Architects
Drawing: Flavin Architects
Drawing: Flavin Architects

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