House for Grandparents is a minimal home located in San Miguel, California, designed by Dash Marshall. For a pair of empty nesters who are often visited by their kids and grandchildren, the architects were asked to do two things. First, to rationalize the floor plan to make it better for entertaining. An existing 30-yr old farmhouse was used as an exterior shell and the interior was renovated like Theseus’ ship, piece by piece, until it was totally new. They started with the rituals: arriving, cooking, eating, lounging, celebrating, bathing, sleeping. After analyzing each and discussing the residents, they designed specific responses. These details are strange monsters in the floor plans.

For a couple who are remarkably free of vanity, a master bathroom without the ever-present vanity mirror. For a kitchen that’s used to conjure prodigious meals, a ‘super pantry’ that makes cooking a joy. For the guests, a bathroom that cannot be missed—just look for the marshmallow. For a family that fondly remembers decades spent farming walnuts, a special trunk-like column that commemorates their labor. The architectural language we developed pays its respects to the Missions of California, the vernacular metalwork of central coast farms, and Aalto’s use of wood that’s warm and crisp. A mixture of fir, white oak, and walnut are used to add richness to reductive forms.

Photography by Bruce Damonte