What's Hot: Raze Application Filed For Site Of 900-Unit Development, Food Hall Along Anacostia River
Habitable Art: David Jameson's Latest Project Hits the Market in DC
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David Jameson's latest project in DC is also a residence that the renowned architect had a hand in building.
Set high above the street in DC's Kent neighborhood, 3131 Chain Bridge Road NW (map) hit the market on Monday, nearly three years after Jameson closed on the development site.
The exterior of the six-bedroom home, wrapped in custom bronze panels and English clay brick tiles with a 10-foot-by-8-foot wide glass front door that swings on a pivot, gives credence to the idea that Jameson's homes are "habitable art."
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The main level of the 9,100 square-foot home features a two-story living room with a fireplace made of custom hot rolled steel, as well as a family room and a chef’s kitchen that are framed by 11-foot-by-17-foot windows and sliding doors that lead out to the saltwater pool, rear gardens, and Battery Kemble Park beyond the property line.
"To me this project is unique as it braids together both 'time' by juxtaposing ancient and time honored materiality with the extraordinary forest of Battery Kemble Park; each of which change with the passing of the seasons and tell the story of time, and 'craft' where the hand of the artisan and the precision of robotically machined constructs are equally celebrated," Jameson told UrbanTurf.
There are six bedroom suites in the house, as well as a custom elevator and a humidification system for art work. The top and bottom floors offer some of the more interesting spaces in the home. The uppermost level consists of rooms that could be bedrooms or an office, as well as a lounge with sliding glass doors that lead out to a wrap-around terrace and green roof, so the space could serve as an indoor/outdoor living space. The lowest level can serve as a garage for upwards of 8 cars, but it also could double as an event space given that it is climate controlled and has twelve-foot ceilings and programmable custom lighting.
The home, listed with HRL Partners at Washington Fine Properties, hit the market on Monday for $12.95 million. More images below.
Photos by Paul Warchol Photography.
See other articles related to: david jameson, kent, luxury real estate dc, washington fine properties
This article originally published at http://dc.urbanturf.production.logicbrush.com/articles/blog/habitable-art-david-jamesons-latest-project-hits-the-market/17008.
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