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Unique Spaces: Making the Most of a Skinny House

  • December 9th 2013

by Shilpi Paul

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Unique Spaces: Making the Most of a Skinny House: Figure 1

This article was published last year as part of UrbanTurf’s Unique Spaces series, where we take a look at properties that could be considered “one-of-a-kind” in the DC area. If you have a home that you think fits the bill, send an email to editor2013@urbanturf.com.

KUBE Architecture specializes in creating open, warm, modern spaces behind traditional facades. So when a young Nigerian family asked the DC-based architecture firm to help design a Foggy Bottom pied-à-terre, KUBE principal Rich Loosle-Ortega and his partner Janet Bloomberg started sketching out a breezy, low-maintenance city home behind the facade of a modest federal-style home. The two-bedroom property was to serve as the second home for the family (based in Nigeria), so KUBE wanted to make something that felt like a retreat.

Unique Spaces: Making the Most of a Skinny House: Figure 2
The original facade remains

The 900-square foot row house in question has a very skinny footprint: the width of the home measures out at 11 feet. KUBE opened up the floorplan and filled the walls with extensive built-ins, including shelving, a desk, closet space, stereo storage, and a butcher block counter that are all constructed from the same light-colored wood. The floating staircase near the entrance allows for an open space underneath, making the home feel wider. The two bedrooms upstairs also have built-ins to maximize the limited floorspace and obviate the need for extra furniture.

Different areas on the home are delineated with materials rather than walls: warm "blood" wood defines a seating area near the entry, Loosle-Ortega told UrbanTurf, and cooler, steel-like colors surround the fireplace and lead upstairs. Like many of their other properties, KUBE likes to mix warm materials with the cooler feel of modern design. The outdoor areas are simple, with brick and stone paving and a single tree in the backyard.

As their trips to the U.S. became less frequent, the family started renting out the house to students, and it is now filled with tenants most of the time. Don't expect to see the unusual space on the market anytime soon, however; the owner is keeping it and plans to pass it down to his children one day.

More photos below.

Unique Spaces: Making the Most of a Skinny House: Figure 3

Unique Spaces: Making the Most of a Skinny House: Figure 4

Unique Spaces: Making the Most of a Skinny House: Figure 5

Unique Spaces: Making the Most of a Skinny House: Figure 6

See other articles related to: dclofts, kube architecture, modern architecture, unique spaces

This article originally published at http://dc.urbanturf.production.logicbrush.com/articles/blog/unique_spaces_making_the_most_of_a_skinny_rowhouse/5869.

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