Slider image
Slider image
Slider image

Evergreen Landing Cottage

The center form, open, light, and airy with its exposed structure, was inspired by research into the history of this particular island neighborhood, which originated as a methodist tenting community. The 3/4 barrel form and its field of skylights, while stepping away from the literalness of a tented image, are rooted in the lightness of tents.

Project Details

Location:

Peaks Island, Maine

Structural Architects:

Whitten Architects project: Winkelman lead

Builder:

LHA Builders

Photography:

James R. Salomon

Recognition

Project Requirements

A 3-season cottage with open public spaces and tons of light, a main level master suite, and 2 guest bedrooms with a bath upstairs. Their goal was for a design with ‘floor to ceiling glass’ to maximize the views, and yet for the new design to weave into the existing context of the island.

Slider image
Slider image
Slider image

Design Concepts

A tight, sloping waterfront site within a thickly settled seasonal community, with north-facing views of great diamond island and casco bay. Calls for a two-part solution. First, daylight: Create a center light-filled contemporary single-story living/dining/kitchen space within a 3/4 barrel-vaulted roof structure.

This space is rotated in plan to sit square to its prime northerly view (skewed to its neighbors). Second: Embed two flanking ‘book-end’ type traditional forms, sitting normal (square) to the neighbors. One contains (and signals) front entry, the other contains bedroom functions and an upper-level program. Their traditional proportions and detail tie the structure as a whole to the surrounding neighborhood.