Canyon House / HK Associates


© Bill Timmerman

© Bill Timmerman
  • Architects: HK Associates
  • Location: Tucson, United States
  • Site: 43560.0 ft2
  • Area: 4500.0 ft2
  • Project Year: 2017
  • Photographs: Bill Timmerman

© Bill Timmerman

© Bill Timmerman

Text description provided by the architects. Emerging from the desert, Canyon House is equal parts land-form and mechanism for viewing. Stoic on the exterior – but more than an object in the landscape – Canyon House blurs the boundary between inside and out, imprinting the exterior environment onto the interior of the home: revealing life as a series of moments, vistas and reflections.


© Bill Timmerman

© Bill Timmerman

Sited to frame the Catalina Mountains to the north and the Tucson Mountains to the southwest, the over-riding intent was for the clients to live “in the view” – sensory immersion being the driving concept and effect of the architecture.


© Bill Timmerman

© Bill Timmerman

The manifestation of this immersive experience is the canyon-like living space at the center of the home. Flanked on the  east and west by the service and bedroom wings, and looking north and south, “the canyon” is also defined by a horizontal datum. Below this seven foot datum, life is organized; above, the interior of the home reaches up to ephemera in the form of a “clerestory” surface.


© Bill Timmerman

© Bill Timmerman

Sections

Sections

© Bill Timmerman

© Bill Timmerman

At the window walls, the panels above the datum afford mountain-top views, while the side wall clerestory captures oblique reflections that shift as the occupants move throughout the house. The effect is for distant panoramas to enter and wrap the interior of the home.


© Bill Timmerman

© Bill Timmerman

Aural sensations within the canyon are likewise affected by an acoustic “cloud” that floats above, creating a serene environment for conversation and contemplation. The cloud collects and organizes artificial lights that become a constellation of stars, reflected in the clerestory, as day turns to night.


© Bill Timmerman

© Bill Timmerman

Spatial thresholds from the canyon space to the wings of the home shift attention away from the big views, towards intimate moments and personal vignettes. Canyon House challenges perceptions through constructed ambiguities and reflected likenesses, attempting to reveal a reality beyond our senses.


© Bill Timmerman

© Bill Timmerman