Rigid Geometry and Undulating Lines Fuse in Six Square House, a New Residence by Young Projects

Bridgehampton, NY—Architectural studio Young Projects has completed Six Square House, a new 3,500-square-foot home located on a verdant, two-acre lot in Bridgehampton, New York. The residence is made up of six 24’x24’ gabled modules, arranged to align roof ridges and create continuity from one module to the next. In contrast, each module’s roof eaves flow upward and downward, which result in a variety of undulating surfaces and unexpected sight lines across the exterior and interior of the home. The home is clad in deep gray, slatted Accoya wood, whose striations enhance the roofscape’s dynamic edges and arcs. 

The completion of Six Square House coincides with Young Projects’ addition to the lot’s historic 1850 farmhouse, which is located at the front of the property, and a new pool house, gunite pool, and ipe deck at the property’s rear. Sited at the lot’s center, Six Square House becomes the nucleus of the property as well as the client’s primary on-site residence, with the farmhouse becoming the guest home. 

Young Projects designed Six Square House as a contemporary counterpart to the property’s farmhouse, which the client had outgrown. The studio set out to create a new residence that nods subtly to the historic architecture of Long Island, while radically reimagining a traditional barn typology as an elegant, innovative home. “Starting with the simple vernacular typology of a barn, the hybrid roofscape of the connected squares ebbs and flows as a new dynamic figure, contemporary in its language but timeless in its origin,” says Bryan Young, founder and co-principal of Young Projects. 

Approaching Six Square House from the front of the property provides a view of the garage and living room modules, separated by a polished concrete path that leads directly into the home’s focal point: a triangular courtyard. The deep-grey rainscreen facade is striking. The slatted roof aligns with slatted exterior walls to create long, vertical striations that begin at the roof ridge and cascade to the ground. Roof and exterior walls are constructed from the same material: charred, stained, and sealed Accoya rainscreen and Western Red Cedar rainscreen. These are durable and low-maintenance engineered woods that play off of the farmhouse’s historic cedar facade while reading as distinctly contemporary. 

“The exterior palette was selected with the cedar of the farmhouse as a starting consideration,” says Marciniak. “We found the black very striking and contemporary in its initial appearance, but the material eventually weathers to a really nice platinum grey.” 

In plan, the six modules that make up Six Square House tessellate around the central triangular courtyard. For Young Projects, this arrangement offered a compelling visual balance between symmetry and asymmetry, depending on the inhabitant’s point of reference in the home. The hybrid roofscape, which combines aligned roof ridges and curving eaves, enhances this dichotomy.

The tessellated arrangement also creates strategic programmatic divisions across the home, with each module loosely tied to a different use: living, kitchen, main bedroom, secondary bedroom, porch, and garage, all which encircle the triangular courtyard. Additionally, this layout takes advantage of the surrounding landscape, with each module offering a different view of the lush property. 

Bedrooms feature framed views of the site’s mature and gnarled trees for privacy. In particular, the main bedroom offers a direct view to an old purple beech tree, which is very dear to the client. Living spaces open directly onto a landscape designed for entertaining: central courtyard, meadow, and pool house. The kitchen, located at the center of the house, is adjacent to the “left-over” triangular courtyard and looks through the open porch that frames views of landscape beyond. 

The living areas and kitchen are linked, resolving as a large open space that emphasizes the undulating flow of the ceiling—a result of the irregular roofscape above. “The spaces within the house both respect and blur across the modules,” says Marciniak. “And the connections between modules generate the most interesting interior spaces as well as the interesting roofline geometry.” While the ceiling undulates through the common area, it is marked by a ruled geometry; the wood framing itself is not bent, rather each straight rafter rotates slightly relative to its neighbors, developing a curving surface in aggregate. 

Throughout the home, material selections and their corresponding color palette follow a neutral, organic spectrum, codified by a given space’s use. Black and platinum grey materials define the home’s exterior: the polished concrete patios and charred Accoya facade and roofscape. Ochre-hued cedar clads the home’s hybrid indoor/outdoor zones: the triangular courtyard and porch, as well as the frames for all exterior-facing doors and windows. Finally, the interior sheathed in alabasters and whites: walls and ceilings are gypsum plaster, flooring and millwork is white oak and ash, and countertops and selected shelving are light marble (Calacatta Caldia, Calacatta Gold, Mountain White, Olympian White).

“The interior palette was selected to have a general lightness and warmth appropriate for a summer house in the Hamptons: soft, light wood finishes, warm white walls, and stone countertops,” says Marciniak. “Materials are generally composed in a way that reads as textural variations on a tight color palette rather than high contrast or loud materials.” 

Overall, Six Square House strikes an elegant, innovative balance across both interiors and exteriors: “One one hand, the design of the house is governed by its own geometric logic,” explains Young. “On the other, the design reframes and connects back to the overall site.”

Project credits:

Architecture: Young Projects

General Contractor: Taconic Builders

Structural Engineer: Silman

Landscape Architecture: Coen+Partners

Landscaper: Landscape Details

Photography: Alan Tansey, Young Projects, Lifestyle Production Group

Rainscreen Supplier: reSAWN TIMBER co.

Styling: Matter Made and Young Projects

Kitchen Millwork, Island Millwork and Bathroom Millwork: Chapter+Verse

 

Photography by Alan Tansey:

Photography Courtesy Young Projects:

Photos by Lifestyle Production Group:

Drawings Courtesy Young Projects:

Access Dropbox Press Kit

Share

Get updates in your mailbox

By clicking "Subscribe" I confirm I have read and agree to the Privacy Policy.

About Young Projects

Young Projects is an architecture and design firm based in New York City. The scale of our work stretches to include buildings, interiors, furniture, material prototypes and objects of curiosity. In most of the work there is an emphasis on making, material sensation, figuration and spatial complexity. Building typology is often a focus of inquiry. Hybrids and ambiguity exist in favor of singularity.

Current projects include a three-story 40,000sf renovation for Steelcase overlooking Central Park; a 33,000sf ground-up mixed-use building in Colorado, a 19-acre residential masterplan in Colorado, a 35,000sf office project for Galaxy Digital’s headquarters in Manhattan; multiple free- standing houses and gut renovations; prototypes for Paola Lenti and several pieces of furniture. In 2018, Noah Marciniak became a partner in the office, bringing a unique dedication to researching construction technology and a new consideration of material detailing. Mallory Shure became a partner in 2020 and contributes her wide-ranging expertise on cultural and institutional projects, schools, libraries, and other public work.

Young Projects’ work has been widely published and has received numerous awards including an AIA NY Merit Award for Six Square House in 2021, Design Vanguard from Architectural Record in 2020, The Architectural League of New York’s Emerging Voices award in 2020, a Progressive Architecture (P/A) Award from Architect Magazine for Glitch House in 2018, an AN Award for the MALI Museum proposal in 2017, and an Azure Award for "Best New Interior Product" for the pulled plaster panels in 2017. In 2016 Young Projects received the “New Practices New York” award from AIA NY. In 2013 Young Projects received The Architectural League of New York’s League Prize.

Recent nominations include two Mies Crown Hall Americas Prize (MCHAP) for the Retreat in the Dominican Republic and the Six Square House (pending 2022). A nomination for the Marcus Prize from the University of Wisconsin in 2021 and a nomination from American Academy of Arts and Letters Architecture Awards also in 2021.

Bryan Young received his Master of Architecture with distinction from Harvard University in 2003, where he was awarded the AIA Henry Adams Medal and the Thesis Prize for his spatial diagrams on Donkey Kong and Pac-Man. He received his Bachelor of Arts with highest honors from UC Berkeley in 1997. Since 2009 he has taught graduate-level architecture design studios and seminars at universities including MIT School of Architecture + Planning, Columbia GSAPP, Parsons School of Design, Syracuse University School of Architecture, and The Cooper Union. Prior to establishing his studio, Young was a senior associate at Allied Works Architecture and previously worked for ARO, SOM and Peter Pfau. 

Contact

https://rock.prezly.com/stories?room=10639

press@thisxthat.com

young-projects.com