Showing posts with label Long Island. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Long Island. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 12, 2020

Architecture Wednesday: Cocoon House

Cocoon House is a LEED-certified environmentally green dwelling on Long Island. It’s called Cocoon because its rounded enclosed walls form a Cocoon shape towards the northern and western neighbors while providing shelter and privacy. The glass side of the house faces south to take in ocean breezes and open views. The cedar shingle cladding of the north/west side of the home is a nod to the architectural material palette of the historic neighborhood.

The 16-foot-high Long Island cottage is split in two: ‘cocooned’ into a soft opaque shape that provides privacy, and transparent and crystalline to allow for views onto an undisturbed landscape. Its L-shaped 1730 square foot footprint is shaped by the legal restriction to build at a 150-foot radius from the wetlands and to keep a 35-foot distance from the adjacent properties. Luckily, the view of the greenery towards the ocean faces south and east, so that the southern glass façade provides both views and passive heating gain.

In addition to providing privacy, the thermal mass of the thick northern/western walls, supported entirely by a timber structure, keep away humidity and retain heat. On the southern/eastern side the sliding doors open to catch the breezes from the Atlantic Ocean that temper the heat in the warmer months. In the winter the glass facade collects heat from the southern sun, and in the summertime, interior shades cut 50 percent of the solar heat gain.

The sensual experience of the sun in a structure that is half opaque and half exposed guides the framework of the design. In the half of the cottage that is transparent, sunlight filters through the translucent colored skylights and reflects off of the water cistern; the skylights above the hallway of the bedroom wing are based on the color theory of Goethe, used by J.M. William Turner in his 19th c. paintings of sunlight above water. The colors range from vermilion red, which signals sunset and rest, above the master bedroom, to deep yellow, which signals zenith and activity, nearest the living room.

Geometric patches of colored sunlight from the skylights and glimmering water reflections from the reflecting pool/cistern project onto the interior white back wall, which is punctured by a few small windows.

You feel both protected from, and open to, the outside world depending on where you are in the home.

You feel cocooned.


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ArchDaily

Wednesday, June 08, 2011

Non-Architecture Wednesday

Hedge fund billionaire David Tepper wanted a new place in the Hamptons because, well, he's a hedge fund billionaire and what else should he do with his money? So he found the perfect house in Sagaponack, long Island--said to be the country's most expensive real estate--and purchased a $43.5 million, 6,000-square-foot oceanfront estate on 6.5 sandy acres with a guest house, swimming pool and tennis court. Looks to be the perfect vacation, or weekend, getaway, eh?

Well, not if you're hedge fund billionaire David Tepper. It seems it wasn't enough for Tepper, so he had the house torn down so he can build a bigger testament to his ego. he purchased the home just last year, from the ex-wife of former New Jersey governor Jon Corzine, in the area's most expensive transaction of 2010. In April, he got a permit for the demolition, and this month the site was finally cleared.

Tepper's new house will be about twice the size, with ocean views from every room, "a sunken tennis court, three-car garage, a widow's walk, second-floor decks including one with a Jacuzzi, and a covered porch."

Like a said, a testament to his ego and his bank account.

source