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Faulkner Architects’ Miner Road House Is Wrapped In A Rainscreen Of Corten Steel

Miner Road House, Orinda, USA / Faulkner Architects

Joe Fletcher

Faulkner Architects has recently designed a family residence clad in Corten steel panels in Orinda, California. The three-bedroom home was designed for a couple with two young sons, who wanted a distinctive home imbued with an environmental ethic.

“They wanted to construct a house that was deeply ecologically site-specific, energy-efficient, and had a strong design identity,” said Faulkner Architects, a studio based in Truckee, California.

 Miner Road House, Orinda, USA / Faulkner Architects

The program began as a remodel of a 1954 ranch house at the foot of a hill next to a seasonal creek.  After finding the existing structure and soils to be unsuitable, the direction settled on reusing the existing footprint under the shade of a Valley Oak that had grown up close to the original house. The surviving portion of the original house is the fireplace which was wrapped in concrete and utilized for structural support. This made additional grading unnecessary and allowed the new house to maintain the same intimate relation to the old oak.

 Miner Road House, Orinda, USA / Faulkner Architects

The family desired an open living layout that connected directly to the landscape. A mezzanine plan evolved with a double height family space nested with a master bedroom and study stacked above the kitchen and nook. A screened pacing deck for long phone calls shades the upper level from afternoon summer sun. Downstairs, secondary bedrooms along an extendable hallway, wrap an outdoor dining area situated between the kitchen and family room.

 Miner Road House, Orinda, USA / Faulkner Architects

Construction materials and methods were considered in balance between first and lifecycle costs. The Corten steel rain screen for the exterior skin and interior wood were chosen to take advantage of zero annual maintenance cost and a shotcrete foundation allowed formwork to be repurposed for wood framing.

 Miner Road House, Orinda, USA / Faulkner Architects

Single use material selections such as the Corten steel and shotcrete foundation reduced complexity in detailing and labor costs allowing a larger portion of the budget to be reallocated for upgraded mechanical, insulation, and glazing systems. The same attitude for interior finishes produced acoustically insulated, unfinished oak ceilings and walls. The sum total of the limited and landscape-driven materials presents a relaxed and quiet built environment that allows the senses to focus on the natural environment. A haptic connection to the rhythms of our planet is evident.

 Miner Road House, Orinda, USA / Faulkner Architects

A 14-gauge Corten rain screen provides a no-maintenance skin. High levels of insulation and glazing efficiency reduce heating and cooling loads. An 8.1kW photovoltaic system provides on-site renewable energy and produced more electrical energy than the house used the first year. Rainwater is collected via a waterfall from the roof at the end of the hallway. Buried tanks store water for use in toilets and laundry. Greywater is collected separately and reused for irrigation. Electronically commutated motors and variable speed heat pumps are used to further limit energy use and control heating and cooling. An energy 
recovery ventilator is used to provide fresh air.

Miner Road House, Orinda, USA / Faulkner Architects Miner Road House, Orinda, USA / Faulkner Architects Miner Road House, Orinda, USA / Faulkner Architects Miner Road House, Orinda, USA / Faulkner Architects Miner Road House, Orinda, USA / Faulkner Architects