Guzhai was designed as a generational home, a gathering place for children, parents, grandparents, and all members of an international client’s extended family. A longtime appreciator of modern design, he approached our team looking to carefully craft a biophilic living space for his wife and young twins, as well as a home to entertain and host visiting friends and family.
At the project’s inception, a unique challenge presented itself – a language barrier between the architect and client. Our limited exposure to Mandarin created a unique opportunity, inspiring our team to communicate early design concepts with the client (a knowledgeable architect and engineer himself) through images, drawings, plans, diagrams, and a 3d physical model. Through translators and the addition of a bilingual engineer and builder to the project team, design ideas were successfully communicated, and a high level of trust developed. These unique relationships led to the creation of a strong concept and aesthetic, and the addition of native Mandarin speaking staff to the Feldman team proved invaluable.
The private site is situated on a flag lot, surrounded by open space with mature perimeter trees and vegetation. The structure consists of two forms layered perpendicularly. On the ground level, a kitchen, dining, and family room flow naturally into outdoor living spaces, centered around a passively cooled double-height living room that pulls cold air from lower levels to the warmer second story via strategically placed windows. A covered patio at the rear of the house and trellis at the front foster a sense of openness; the surrounding scenery is framed thoughtfully by architecture, becoming almost transparent. The L-shaped structure nestles a protected, private courtyard and pool between the house and hillside, which directly connects to the guest suite. The suite is thoughtfully designed as a space for the client’s visiting parents.
Supported by the lower level on one end and the hillside on the other, the private second floor is balanced gracefully atop its lower counterpart. The primary suite lightly floats above a grove of mature oaks, overlooking distant views of the San Francisco Bay to the north. On the opposite end, the twins’ rooms mirror each other as to “not to favor one over the other”, equally divided by a shared study nook. A double height stone clad fireplace connects the first and second floors, and wood slats splash patterns of daylight onto a rich material palette.
PROJECT TEAM
Contractor: Interspace Builders Inc
Landscape: Thuilot Associates
Interiors: Gaile Guevara Studio
Structural: Provest Structural Engineering
Lighting Design: Tucci Lighting
Civil Engineer: Lea & Braze Engineering
Geotechnical Engineer: Murray Engineers
Mechanical: Philip Neumann Energy Design