Wednesday, February 20, 2019

Architecture Wednesday: Tucson Mountain Lava House

When we talk about places we’d like to live and I mention the desert as being one of my choices, Carlos always gags. But there’s just something about the sparseness of the landscape, the broad vistas, the heat and, sometimes, the cold of a high desert locale.

Plus, deserts always seem to have the most stunning homes, like the Tucson Mountain Lava House in Tucson Mountains just above the Santa Cruz River.

With vast walls of glass, you can relax in the home and yet still take in the vast landscape, bedrock outcroppings, various types of towering cacti, and desert dwelling plants like palo verde, ocotillo, jojoba, and creosote.

It’s just peaceful.

Like most desert homes, this one was designed to be anchored into the natural terrain without interrupting it as much as possible. The house was sited between weaving natural water sources and desert vegetation without drawing attention to human imprints on nature and yet it provides views of the Tucson Mountains on one side and the Santa Catalina Mountains on the other.

The house features several intentionally placed primary walls around which the rest of the house is built. These walls “anchor” the home to its natural slope and it’s around these walls that the public and private spaces are arranged.

In an attempt to control heat and maximize views, Lava House was built rather low, with long horizontal roof planes and several overhangs that provide shady havens throughout the property. But then there are other spaces where the low roofline allows winter sun to enter the house on shorter, darker days.

It’s made for living in intense heat and cool climates, but whatever time of year, it’s gorgeous.


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6 comments:

  1. Poured, polished concrete floors... very, very nice.

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  2. Bob - I’m with you. I love the idea of a desert property. We visit Lanzarote. It’s the closest we can get to your choice on this side of the Atlantic.
    JP

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  3. I'm with Carlos on desert living, but this is very pretty on the inside. The outside...not so much. I'm thinking tarantulas, scorpions and rattlers, oh my!
    My eyes are acting up. I keep seeing "I'm not a rodent". I know it's robot, from memory, heh.

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  4. Both our parents did a couple year
    stint in Arizona. Was lots of fun to
    go visit, in the winter and early spring.
    Fascinating place and was fun to see how
    the area adapted to the climate.

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  5. I think living in the dearer could be awesome.
    When people build and take into account the terrain and environment I’m always amazed. Everything should be built like that!

    XoXo

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  6. I went to the University of Arizona and lived for Tucson for many years in the last century (and would move back in a heartbeat if the spouse and I could find work) and can say without hesitation that this is a modern Tucson home...and absolutely stunning.

    The difference between Tucson and Phoenix can be likened to the difference between San Francisco and Los Angeles, Phoenix being Los Angeles.

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