Set in a Virginia forest on the fringes of Washington DC, this house is designed to serve as a tranquil refuge. The house perches on the slope of a valley, rising above the forest floor and creating experiences of the woods from different elevations. Toward the bottom of the slope, a low-lying floodplain includes a stream that flows into the Potomac River, so the house is situated in a way that preserves these sensitive ecologies. For the interiors, which are clad in natural, warm materials, we configured spaces in a way that choreographs movement through the house in relationship to outside views. In carefully tailored ways, the architecture frames specific views: solid walls obscure neighbors while windows create different vantage points of the forest—foreground, middleground, and distant. Diagonal sightlines organize the layout and dynamically connect the interior spaces with the landscape beyond, resulting in an architectural environment fully immersed in its natural surroundings.