New Residence in Austin, Contemporary Texas Property USA, Modern TX home photos

Residence 1446, Austin

Contemporary Home in Texas design by Miró Rivera Architects, USA

Dec 13, 2018

Design: Miró Rivera Architects

Location: Austin, Texas, United States of America

Residence 1446 in Austin, TX

Photos by Paul Finkel, Piston Design

Situated in a low-lying field adjacent to both a lake and a quiet lagoon, Residence 1446 was the final element of a ten-year master plan that includes a guest house, pedestrian bridge, pool, and boathouse.

Residence 1446 Austin Texas

Photos by Paul Finkel, Piston Design

Residence 1446, Austin, Texas

Arranged around a central courtyard and characterized by its distinctive, copper-clad roof profiles, this onelevel home is defined by a horizontality that responds quietly and sensitively to its serene wetland surroundings.

Residence 1446 Austin Texas

The design aims to respect and enhance the home’s unique site, while maintaining a balance between opening up to the landscape and maintaining the owners’ privacy. The dramatically-angled rooftops orient the spaces within to the natural landscape, while long, horizontal apertures provide sweeping panoramas throughout the home. Meanwhile, deeply-recessed overhangs offer shade and privacy to this family setting, providing a modern take on the “American porch.”

Residence 1446 Austin Texas

The layout of the home is simple: two wings defined by thick limestone walls and smaller, punched window openings are connected by a volume whose roof appears to float atop walls made entirely of glass. This transparent volume contains the more public living and dining spaces. The wings house private and service spaces: the north wing contains the bedrooms, and the south wing contains the garage, media, storage, laundry, and kitchen.

Residence 1446 Austin Texas

The home’s east-west axis emphasizes an experiential procession from the auto court through the home’s main spaces to the landscape beyond. The north-south axis is a more functional circulation route that links the programs within the main house with a boathouse to the south, and over a delicate steel pedestrian bridge to a copperclad guest house to the north.

Residence 1446 Austin Texas

Approaching from the circular auto court, the home appears relatively closed off: rough-hewn, locally-sourced limestone walls punctuated by narrow vertical slots enclose a four-car garage and define an east-west axis that guides occupants along a smooth limestone path. Inspired by the natural springs that are characteristic of the Central Texas hill country, water bubbles up from a monolithic limestone plinth and flows gently down a shallow channel running parallel to the entry path, drawing visitors toward the entrance. The deep overhang of the front porch frames views of the courtyard, its grassy lawn punctuated by a single tree and bordered with smooth river rock. From the courtyard, the home begins to open up, revealing a glimpse of the expansive site through two 40-foot long walls of uninterrupted, butt-glazed windows.

Residence 1446 Austin Texas

Arriving at the front door, the architecture restricts the view once again, as the focus turns to a 9-foot tall pivot door clad in patinated copper panels and framed by a narrow sidelight. Entering with a graceful sweep of the pivot door, visitors find themselves in a warm foyer featuring smooth limestone floors and white Venetian plaster walls and ceilings contrasted by rich African sapele wood accents. From the foyer, a series of stair treads appears to float up to a wood wall, which is actually a 9-foot wide pivot door that provides access to a lofted game room. The owners exit the garage below this loft, entering the home just beyond the stairs through a concealed door clad in sapele. From this point, the owners have direct access to both the kitchen and a series of service spaces.

Residence 1446 Austin Texas

Meanwhile, visitors proceed past a large art wall that encloses a jewel-box powder room with a steel-hammered copper accent wall and custom vanity that doubles as a partition. Turning left at another thick, axial wall of roughback limestone reveals a spectacular sight: a 1,000-square-foot great room bounded only by glass on both sides. The architecture frames the landscape, disappearing through the transparency of the glass walls, while clerestory windows flood the space with natural light. The limestone floors and walls appear to travel through the house from interior to exterior, reinforcing the connection to the site.

Residence 1446 Austin Texas

The centerpiece of the great room’s living area is an 11-foot wide fireplace with an Old Dominion soapstone hearth and sculptural weathering steel hood. A sofa enclosure with built-in end tables was designed by the architects, as was the dining table, which is composed of stacked planes of sapele wood. The Venetian plaster ceiling, which slopes from 12 feet up to nearly 18 feet, is divided up by a rhythmic series of plaster fins, which serve to diffuse the light from the clerestory windows while concealing artificial lighting for nighttime use.

Residence 1446 Austin Texas

The kitchen combines the typical limestone and sapele wood with stainless steel fixtures and Bianco Romano countertops. A generous, curved wet bar (with barstools designed by the architects) for entertaining guests separates the kitchen from the dining area, while a large island provides the ideal surface for food prep. Beyond the kitchen, a vestibule containing a china cabinet and wine storage opens to a pantry on one side, and a small but lofty office on the other.

Residence 1446 Austin Texas

The terrace that extends from the great room is almost as big, with a set of broad, gentle steps leading down to an expansive lawn, which in turn extends to the edge of the lake itself. Adjacent to the kitchen is an outdoor living area set within a double-height space and shaded by a deep overhang that extends along the kitchen and great room. Just around the corner is an open-air barbecue with an outdoor kitchenette.

Residence 1446 Austin Texas

In the private wing containing the master suite, media room, and two bedrooms, a continuous gallery wall of sapele paneling runs alongside floor-to-ceiling glazing. The bedrooms feature sapele wood floors and windows that frame views of the guest house, pedestrian bridge, and wetlands that line the private lagoon. The master suite includes a small outdoor hot tub accessed through the master bath, while the hallway to the bedrooms terminates with an outdoor terrace shielded from the auto court by a thick limestone wall.

Residence 1446 Austin Texas

Residence 1446 Austin, Texas, USA – Property Information

Design Team:
Design Partners: Juan Miró, FAIA LEED AP, Miguel Rivera, FAIA LEED AP
Project Architect/Manager: Aaron Hunt, Matthew Sturich

Height: 1 floor 20′-0″
Area: 7,075 sf
Site: 7.6 acres (329,314 sf)
Code Occupancy: A-1 (7,075 sf)

Photographer: Paul Finkel, Piston Design

Miró Rivera Architects

Residence 1446, Austin, Texas information / images received 121218 from Miró Rivera Architects

Location: Austin, Texas, United States of America

Architecture in Texas

Texas Architecture

Contemporary Texan Houses

Contemporary Rollingwood House, Travis County
Design: Bade Stageberg Cox, Architects
Contemporary Rollingwood House in Texas
image from Chicago Athenaeum

Annie Residence in Austin
Design: Bercy Chen Studio, Architects
Annie Residence in Austin
photo from architects

Main Stay House in Austin

Palma Plaza House in Austin

Tree House Austin

American Architecture Design – chronological list

Observation Tower at Circuit of the Americas Texas

Texas Exes Alumni Center Austin Building

Public Restroom in Austin

Dallas Buildings

American Houses

Comments / photos for the Residence 1446, Austin, Texas Architecture design by Miró Rivera Architects page welcome