Keep Exploring Architizer by Creating a Free Account or Logging in.

This feature is for industry professionals.  To unlock it, signup and then join or add your company. To unlock this feature,  signup and then submit your professional details.

Membership is Free.

LinkedIn Facebook Google
or
Already a Member? Sign in.
Add To Collection Add to Collection
The Green House  

The Green House

Palo Alto, CA, United States

Project Featured on Mar 10, 2025
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection
View Original View Original
Add To Collection Add to Collection

Other Projects by S^A | Schwartz and Architecture

Add To Collection Add to Collection

Mourning Dovecote

Add To Collection Add to Collection

Paradox House

Add To Collection Add to Collection

Portola Valley Home

Add To Collection Add to Collection

Diamond ADU

Add To Collection Add to Collection

Leit House

Add To Collection Add to Collection

Modal Home

Add To Collection Add to Collection

Pinales House

Add To Collection Add to Collection

The Meander

Add To Collection Add to Collection

Lichen House

Add To Collection Add to Collection

Sonoma Pool House

Add To Collection Add to Collection

Wisconsin Street Residence

Add To Collection Add to Collection

Rutledge Street Residence

Add To Collection Add to Collection

Occidental Recording Studio

Add To Collection Add to Collection

Shou Sugi Ban House

Add To Collection Add to Collection

29th Street Residence

Add To Collection Add to Collection

Overlook Guest House

Add To Collection Add to Collection

Box on the Rock

Add To Collection Add to Collection

Hydeaway House

Add To Collection Add to Collection

Crook | Cup | Bow | Twist

Add To Collection Add to Collection

Buena Vista Residence

The Green House

Palo Alto, CA, United States

Project Featured on Mar 10, 2025
STATUS
Built
YEAR
2023
SIZE
3000 sqft - 5000 sqft
BUDGET
Undisclosed
The original home before our renovation and addition, was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright’s protégé, Aaron Green and built by Echler Homes in 1966. In 1951, Frank Lloyd Wright hired Green as his West Coast representative allowing him to continue his independent practice out of their joint office.

Our primary design charge became “First, do no harm.” This dictum, from Hippocrates’ 400 B.C.E. text “Of the Epidemics”, would prove ironic given the timing of the global pandemic and its impact on the project’s cost and schedule. Our challenge was to protect the design integrity of the home while adding a substantial amount of space to make the home viable for a young family with three children.

The home was virtually untouched by the original owners and included custom furniture pieces salvaged and integrated into the new design. The house is tucked back from the road on a flag lot surrounded by more traditional suburban homes. The original home was 1,590 SF with three bedrooms and two baths on a third of an acre lot. We added 1,512 SF for a total of 3,102 SF. When we first met on site, we discussed the importance of respecting the integrity of the original home and landscape, which featured a landscaped swale running along the center of the site –a distinctive added topography for the small site and essential, we would soon find out, given the high-water table of the property.

Given the spider-like sculptural roof and scuppers of the original, the home already was a complete thought, with no obvious solution of how to add to the composition, let alone double the interior square footage. Our first design move was to head off the existing downward sloping roof beams mid-span and add a small rear addition along the entire length of the house under a new upward-sloping roof. This opened the dark kitchen and bedrooms with a new higher ceiling while continuing the rhythm of the existing structure and creating a niche for hidden cove lighting where the original beams once ran.

In addition, since the existing carport and scupper was too low for many modern family cars and no longer met local code for covered parking, we raised the roofline and scupper at the front to create a new carport while also converting a portion of that area into a new sunken family room, consistent with the mid-century vibe of the original.

Finally, we added a prime bedroom suite tucked behind a new board-formed concrete wall. Taking inspiration from the home’s existing concrete block walls, our addition peeks out behind the new wall –referential but deferential. Despite the addition’s deference, we wanted the roof to have its own distinct character, with the lightness of the clerestory windows balancing the heaviness of the original roofline. Whenever possible, views through the space frame the iconic roof scuppers as they touch down to ground. The design strategy is to let our modern interventions shine but with the mindset of “What would Mr Green do?”

Product Spec Sheet

Were your products used?
Join as a manufacturer to add your products.

Collaborating Firms

Photographer

Team

Articles