Orcas Island Retreat

 

A young couple asked DA to help create “a place to share with friends, a place for adventure and exploring, being a kid again, cooking together, experiencing nature and being part of something bigger.” The result is a long-term plan for “restoring the soul of the property” including designing this main house, renovating a number of existing cabins, and generally creating a more sustainable landscape and building infrastructure for future generations.

 
 
 
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Orcas Island retreat
 
 
 

Reconnecting

An old house on the property sat squarely in the middle of the lawn, blocking views from other cabins toward the water. The new house is located further back from the shoreline, which allows all the buildings to share the views and to ‘gather’ around the amphitheater-like open space. Large lift-slide doors encourage indoor-outdoor living. At the shoreline, a tall creosote bulkhead was removed and the pocket beach was restored, creating habitat for salmon forage fish and providing a place for people to reconnect to the sea.

 
 
 
 
Engaging with generations of visitors
 
 
 

Friends and Family Workshop

One of the owners’ goals was to engage generations of visitors in the design process, so DA proposed a weekend-long series of workshops that helped get to the heart of the project with the involvement of friends and family.

 
 
 
 
 

Project Team

DeForest Architects Seattle Studio | John DeForest AIA, Rosie Donovan, Geoff Briggs, Meredith Kelly
Owner’s Rep | Alison Kartiganer, Lumberjill
Interior Design | NB Design Group
Landscape Design | Allworth Design
Structural | Swenson Say Faget
Contractor | Krekow Jennings
Photography | Tim Bies
Categories | Rural Retreats

Publications
Luxe Interiors + Design, January/February 2019
Dwell Home Tour, Oct. 2019
The Cedar Book, Vol. 12

 

NEXT UP:

Tree House

Suspended like an aerie over the forest floor, this family home overlooks a woodland meadow on one side and Puget Sound on the other.

 
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