House of Horns by WOJR

The House of Horns by WOJR is located in Los Altos Hills, United States. Enfolding an existing foundation, the house features a single-story upper level with above-ground chambers, a centerline stone fireplace carved from Danby marble and a cave-like bathing space bound by an ovoid column. Designed to be “an assemblage of instruments” capturing the natural cycles, it is surrounded by a wild meadow landscape of California-native grasses and scrub.

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About House of Horns

House of Horns, An Elaboration of Musical Instruments to Capture the Seasons

Before any formal resemblance manifested, the titular ‘horns’ of the house were first and foremost conceptualized of a horn as an instrument. The house would be an assemblage of instruments tuned to capture the cycles of the day, and of the seasons—the changing light, the growth, decay, and growth of the foggy Bay landscape.

Restoration of the Original Hillside Topography

The initial act of the project is to restore the original hillside topography, re-burying the lower level of the house into the earth, producing two distinct environments:

Above, an effectively single story house nestled on a hill, its perimeter touching the ground on all sides. One large open space for gathering, eating, cooking. A ceiling composed of inverted elliptical vaults reach out toward the edges of the space with a series of skylights and clerestories, each with its own orientation and focus. The low keel in the middle subtly divides and demarcates the singular space into parts. Holding the center of the space and the very centerline of the house, a stone fireplace carved from blocks of Danby marble from Vermont—one of the projects within a project.

If above, the house is defined by a singular compound space, below a series of distinct chambers. The innermost, a cave-like space for bathing held up by an ovoid column carved from another block of stone. These chambers selectively re-connect outward through sunken courtyards, mediating connections to the meadow landscape and horizon outside.

Wild State with a Meadow of Low-Water California

Outside, the hillside is returned to a wild state with a meadow of low-water California native grasses, perennials, scrub, and live oaks. Like the house, the landscape has many layers. Its careful calibration of texture and tone extends the aesthetic experience out across the changing seasons. It acts with the house as a synthetic whole, a precisely tuned instrument to experience the world around.

Photography by Nick Dearden
Visit WOJR

- by Matt Watts

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