This vacation home is used with various degrees of frequency and intensity depending on the weather and the number of invited guests. Architect: David Jameson Architect
Photography by Paul Warchol
Architecture, Interiors
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Comments are closed. For this reason, the house is composed of several separate cabins that can be locked down or conditioned and inhabited as needed. Although the cabins are individual buildings, they are linked conceptually by their exterior metal cladding and the fact that all of the roofs are sloped but coplanar. A screened porch connects the three main cabins while providing a breezy place to relax. From the architect
After hurricane Isabel ravaged Maryland’s eastern shore, Dorchester Country Department of Planning and Zoning established an ordinance proclaiming that all new residences must be built three feet above the base flood elevation.