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2023 GFD 🏆 Awards

Gold Winner – Switchback House | McLeod Bovell Modern Houses

Located on a wide, elliptically-shaped site that is bounded by a winding, mountain road, the Switchback House uses found topography as a generator for an unconventional house. The length of the site allows program to spread itself laterally over two levels strung out narrowly across the slope. Because site is short and very steep in it’s down-slope dimension it was decided that movement through the house would follow a side-to-side path that transversed the site across it’s length. The resultant turning motion when direction is reversed is reiterated in the circulation and the ultimate experience of the house, that of a navigation sequence which operates along and around a series of tightly bent, hairpin concrete walls that abut the hallway and stair circulation sequences.

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Gold 🏆 Winner
Global Future Design Awards 2023

Switchback House
Private Residential Under Construction)

Firm
McLeod Bovell Modern Houses

Architect/Designer
Matthew McLeod & Lisa Bovell

Design Team
Matt Mcleod, Lisa Bovell, Pooya Sanjari, Daniel Ching, Yejin Yoon

Project Location
West Vancouver, BC Canada

Country
Canada

Photographer/Copyright
©Thomas Yuan, Jerry Wu

Social Media Handles
Facebook: N/A

YouTube: N/A
Instagram: N/A
Twitter: N/A

Website URL
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The clients wished to maximize opportunities for an uninterrupted 120 foot long panoramic window highlighting the “ribbon” views of the site comprised of trees a sliver of ocean and big sky beyond. An associated seating ledge at the main floor and a raised garden wall at the basement create privacy by deliberately limiting downward views of the switchback road and the neighbourhood below. This client directive also generated the program “switch” which locates the exterior deck spaces from a conventional in-front position to the back house. This unusual positioning created opportunities: a generous opening for light and outdoor space at the “back” of the house and a basement pass-through that allows the lower floor rooms to engage with a garden and the exposed granite bedrock underlying the site. Street-side the house offers protection from traffic and overlook with a pair of overlapping concrete walls. These walls alternatively emerge from and fly over the rocky slope below allowing light and access into the middle of the long floor plates while promoting privacy and security for the occupants of the house.