This Off-Grid Design Studio Feels Like It’s Floating in a Forest

Woodland views take center stage in this backyard office crafted from cedar, glass, and concrete.

Extra-wide concrete pillars help to support the studio at its core.
Extra-wide concrete pillars help to support the studio at its core.

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Sharon and Mike Matas’s backyard studio in Healdsburg, California, feels less like an office and more like a tree house. "The design allows the owners to work fully immersed in a forest of Douglas fir, madrone, and oak trees," says architect Robert Swatt of Swatt Miers Architects.

The remote studio/office that Robert Swatt of Swatt Miers Architects designed for a Healdsburg, California, property is marked by glass walls that provide the feeling of working in nature.
The remote studio/office that Robert Swatt of Swatt Miers Architects designed for a Healdsburg, California, property is marked by glass walls that provide the feeling of working in nature.
A ceiling and flooring made from Western Red Cedar pay tribute to the trees of the forested landscape.
A ceiling and flooring made from Western Red Cedar pay tribute to the trees of the forested landscape.

Supported by a pair of extra-wide, cast-in-place concrete pillars, the net-zero, off-grid studio cantilevers over a steep wooded hillside. "Out of respect for the beauty of the site, one of our earliest goals was to keep the architecture light on the land," Swatt says. "The structure is partially located above a level pad, and partially over a decline. The floor is lifted so it hovers above the ground, allowing the land and nature to remain untouched."

Sunlight pours through the surrounding treetops and creates light play on the forest floor and on the interior of the studio.
Sunlight pours through the surrounding treetops and creates light play on the forest floor and on the interior of the studio.

See the full story on Dwell.com: This Off-Grid Design Studio Feels Like It’s Floating in a Forest
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