Nurtured by Nature: Site-Specific Architecture
Not all buildings have to tower over the land on which they sit; some are integrated into their natural surroundings to stunning effect
Not all buildings have to tower over the land on which they sit; some are integrated into their natural surroundings to stunning effect
The home has been built as a continuation of the landscape,” says Maria Gryllaki, of Aloni, on the Greek island of Antiparos. “I’ve rarely seen a property so well integrated with its surroundings. The color of the exterior – similar to the earth – the materials used, and the architecture itself create a feeling that it has always been there.”
“Organic buildings are the strength and lightness of the spiders’ spinning. Buildings qualified by light, bred by native character to environment – married to the ground,” said Wright, whose famous cantilevered Fallingwater, which “cascades” over the waterfall on which it was built, is as embedded in the landscape as its image is in the minds of enthusiasts.
Properties like Aloni and Fallingwater, which merge with the landscape – incorporate its material, emulate its form, atmosphere, or history, and appear to have grown from the ground – offer a stunning alternative to today’s towering high-rises and expansive “starchitecture,” which, standing out in stark contrast to their environments, appear to have landed from another planet.
Offering protection from the elements, environmental benefits, and a deep connection to nature, architecture that integrates into the landscape dates back thousands of years. Cave and cliff dwellings were some of the earliest examples. In places like Granada in Spain, Matera in Italy, and the Shanxi Province of China, these site-embracing spaces continue to be occupied or have, in recent years, come back on to the scene in more modern iterations.
Along with Fallingwater, the exquisite evolution of site-embracing architecture in modern times resulted in such iconic examples as Eileen Gray’s e.1027 house in the south of France, and John Lautner’s Elrod House in Palm Springs, California.
Built for interior designer Arthur Elrod, and completed in 1968, Lautner’s Elrod House is defined by its massive concrete domed roof – designed to provide shade from the desert sun. Set into a hillside, the sculptural home literally incorporates the landscape, integrating rock exposed during the excavation into the interior.
“I like the idea of the caveman analogy, where you go back into the cave and it’s dark and you’re one with the earth, then you go to the edge and you look out over the landscape,” says Jim Olson, founding architect of Seattle-based firm Olson Kundig. The creator of stunning site-embracing properties, Olson is speaking specifically of what is another classic example: his Earth House, also built in 1968 when Olson was in his 20s. Commissioned by a former ambassador to Iceland who wished to emulate the vernacular sod-roof houses found around Reykjavik, the home in Washington state – carved into a hill and featuring a grass-topped platform roof – all but disappears into the landscape.
Rock star retreat
Completed in 2010 and designed by Kundig, the firm’s Pierre house, on the San Juan Islands, Washington, was inspired by the large rock outcropping found on the site and favored by the owner. Described as a “retreat nestled into the rock,” the art- and antique-filled home is so deeply embedded into the site that it looks a part of the landscape. Rock hugs the exterior, the roof is topped by greenery, and foliage surrounds it. Inside, various interior elements were carved from stone and crushed rock was incorporated into the flooring.
Materials sourced from the surroundings and a design adapted to the culture and climate help to achieve beautiful, appropriate architecture – Max Pritchard
When conceiving Southern Ocean Lodge – a stunning luxury hotel on Australia’s Kangaroo Island – architect Max Pritchard, of South Australia-based firm Max Pritchard Gunner, not only embraced getting to know the site, he also used the experience to inform the design.
“My client and I spent days walking the site, understanding the uniqueness of all the areas. We formed a little pathway through the bushes to the future location of the great room,” says Pritchard. “Our aim then was to secure this same sense of arrival in our design – in effect, a bushwalk surprisingly opening out to a magnificent sea vista.”
Along with local limestone used to build a 328-foot sculptural anchoring wall, the majority of the materials were carried in by hand. “Materials sourced from the surroundings and a design adapted to the culture and climate help to achieve beautiful, appropriate architecture,” says Pritchard.
Award winners
Located in northwest Norway in a remote setting of trees, rock, moss, and mountain, the Juvet Landscape Hotel (featured in the Oscar®-winning movie Ex Machina) is another stunning example of a retreat that’s deeply connected to its environment. Designed by Oslo-based Jensen & Skodvin, individual guesthouses with dark-wood exteriors and at least one fully glazed façade blur the lines between inside and out.
“We’re interested in the way that architecture can be a powerful lens that intensifies the experience of the context; that can even make the invisible visible,” says co-founding architect Charlotte Skene Catling. “This allows the qualities of the site to resonate and take on a tangible, inhabitable form. The boundary between buildings and their surroundings becomes blurred, and ideally they can make one see, understand, and experience the context more consciously.”
We’re interested in the way architecture can be a powerful lens that intensifies the experience of the context; that can make the invisible visible – Charlotte Skene Catling
Made from flint, the ancient material that is found on the surface of the site and only in the area where a chalk fault line runs, the home’s color gradations move from dark to light, blending the home into earth and sky.
These site-embracing properties prove the benefits of adapting building to site, rather than adapting site to building. “The rewards are the creation of a completely unique project, enriched by its surroundings with a very specific sense of context,” says Skene Catling.
Over time the properties grow further into the space and become a part of it. “Buildings become more beautiful with age,” says Kundig. “As they weather, they slowly merge with the landscape – this is an important part of the design. I try to design with the future in mind – knowing that the ultimate success of a house or a building is how it is able to adapt to future needs and for future generations.”