Dogtrot Homes Are Commonplace in North Carolina. This One Is Anything But

The family home has the style’s characteristic central breezeway, but supercharges it with a soaring 20-foot ceiling.

Dogtrot Homes Are Commonplace in North Carolina. This One Is Anything But

The family home has the style’s characteristic central breezeway, but supercharges it with a soaring 20-foot ceiling.

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Project Details:

Location: Hillsborough, North Carolina

Architect: Studio Becker Xu / @studio.beckerxu

Footprint: 3,400 square feet

Builder: BuildSense

Structural Engineer: Lysaght & Associates

Landscape Design: New Leaf Landscaping

Millwork: Xylem Custom Woodworks

Metalwork: Leo Gaev Metalworks

Photographer: Keith Isaacs Photo / @keithisaacsphoto

From the Architect: "Studio Becker Xu, founded and led by Robert Becker and Sharon Xu, has designed The Dogtrot House, a 3,400-square-foot home on a densely wooded site in Hillsborough, a town just outside of the Raleigh-Durham area. Nestled in a forested grove at the north end of a narrow, 10-acre site, the house is sheltered by oak, sweet gum, maple and persimmon trees, and opens onto an expansive view of a pond.

"The homeowners are Becker’s sister and brother-in-law, and commissioned the studio to design a home that reflects their appreciation of nature, and supports their outdoors-oriented lifestyle with their two young children, including activities such as raising chickens, fishing, landscaping and gardening.

"In order to design for a seamlessly indoor/outdoor way of life, Becker and Xu decided to pay tribute to a historic vernacular housing typology of the Southeastern U.S. The traditional dogtrot house is single story and features two enclosed living areas, often with distinct private and common functions, with a covered breezeway between, unifying indoor and outdoor living areas under one roof. This format reflects a connection with the outdoors that is synonymous with life in the region. The clients’ desire to be surrounded by both family and nature in their home called for a new adaptation of this once-ubiquitous typology, expanding and reframing the idea of outdoor living.

"In this case, the primary programs of the house are pulled apart to allow views between them, providing an encompassing experience of the outdoors that welcomes nature into the rituals of daily life. The result is four pavilions that each house a basic domestic function: cooking, eating, playing, and resting—connected by a double-height central corridor, framed by a 20-foot cathedral ceiling, that serves as the hearth of the home. This shared gable frames a 100-foot-long continuous space for gathering, one that can easily transform into a breezy outdoor living room via large sliding glass doors that open at either end. The gable extends outside the home to create shaded porches that draw the living space out into the expansive surrounding landscape.

"The central zone features a utility volume that combines a stair up to the loft, custom millwork, a powder room, and a fireplace. The central 10-foot-long piece of millwork is multifunctional as an extended dining table, desk for a home office, and easy-to-access storage. A half-height curved board-formed concrete arc at the front entry leads you into the center of the home, underneath a laminated wood ceiling that gives the feel of being sheltered by the warmth of Southern pine. Another board-formed concrete arc continues at the porch outside, extending from the home back out towards a clearing in the forest. The dark-colored earthen tiles in the central space ground the home and provide a visual and tactile connection to the landscape.

"The curved concrete arcs and red columns offer a loose framework for a variety of tableaus: indoor and outdoor seating, family entertainment area, and playscape for the children. A floating blackened steel stair leads up to a lofted space with a dormer that sets you amongst the tree canopy beyond. The loft is a meditative space, used as a reading nook, a place to do yoga, a sleeping space for guests, and additional play area for the children. A dining area tucked underneath the loft features a dining table made by the client out of reclaimed red oak from a barn in Asheville, North Carolina, and a circular window that spotlights the landscape. On the other end of the house, a separate seating area with a fireplace faces onto the pond. A spacious, storage-filled kitchen (where the clients spend a majority of their time) opens onto this living space. Each of the other rooms, including 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, and kitchen, provide their own unique encounter with nature, framing different views – a crop of treetops, a sliver of tree trunks, a swatch of sky, a panorama of the pond.

"The project also includes a chicken coop, an outbuilding located on the same plot as the house. Studio Becker Xu developed a design that the homeowners could build together with their family, organized around moments of utility, with each of its four facades animated by boxes highlighting each of the functional elements of a typical coop. A protected run, elevated henhouse, nesting boxes, and feed storage together form a tableau of a day in the life of a hardworking hen."

Photo by Keith Isaacs

Photo by Keith Isaacs

Photo by Keith Isaacs

See the full story on Dwell.com: Dogtrot Homes Are Commonplace in North Carolina. This One Is Anything But
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