cabins & barns

CABIN_01

Following up on two themes from my northward journey, I’m giving you a look into two ideas, both alike in simplicity.  The Coast: a cabin, square with a large hip roof over a wrap-around porch, and elevations that need a good fleshing out.  Farmland: a barn, with deep eaves on three sides, enclosed in glass behind.

BARN_01

some silos

SILO_03

Driving on I-5 through northern California takes you through a lot of farm land, and reminds  you just how much of the American economy is agriculture.  This means silos – lots of silos, which of course got me thinking. . . From top to bottom: Two silos bridged by a glass Miesian volume; Two silos on a courtyard base, bridged at the top; a picturesque collection of three silos and a grain elevator; a  battery of six silos, spaces cut between them, topped with a temple form.

SILO_01

SILO_02

SILO_04

a gas station and the california vernacular

GAS-STATION_02

Driving along the coast through Laguna Beach, I noticed a funky little structure now operating as the offices for a small auto repair shop – it was clearly an old gas station, with the concrete pump pads still extant, which I’ve drawn in the top-most drawing.  The fascinating bit was that the overall building was a  gabled Spanish stucco hut, complete with a red tile roof and chimney, but the service awning was a flat modernist roof, and which cut deep into the gabled volume.  The overlap and simultaneity of languages was so simple, irreverent, and playful.  So I did my own variation: the plan is the bottom half of the top drawing, the half-elevations are below.

GAS-STATION_03