This 1940s beach house transforms into a new multi-generational home, doubling the livable area while lightly touching the delicate ecology of the waterfront. Two shifting wings hover over the hillside and beach supported by thin steel columns and pin piles.

Located on the eastern shore of Hood Canal near the Bangor submarine base, the new beach house includes the original two-bedroom structure. The new home also features two new bedrooms, two bathrooms, and flex space.

The design consists of three distinct parts: the original footprint, and the two projecting wings: the first a south ground floor addition, and the second an upper-level master suite to the north.

Solved: Regional Problem of Building on Fragile Shoreline 

The house represents a regional northwest problem of building on fragile shoreline. Due to the complex constraints of the shoreline exemption, the architects kept to the existing footprint. They expanded the house only from the existing structure. As a result, all new square footage is supported by compact pier foundations on pin piles.

Native plantings and drought tolerant species were brought in to mitigate site disturbance and increase the ecological function of the site. The architects wanted the site preservation to extend beyond the footprint and into the materials of the building itself.

Local cedar, which is quintessential to a northwest house, wears naturally with the wet and dry seasons. Stainless steel and concrete bring a maritime accent to the wood materials. Through the use of naturally weathering materials, the life of the building was extended while allowing ease of maintenance for the users.

A Beach House for Relatives, Neighbors, and Friends

The clients, both grandparents and retirees, wanted a place of retreat and welcome. Like many northwest families, that meant designing various indoor and outdoor spaces for their children, future grandchildren, neighbors, and friends.

The new wings of the house create a layering of community and privacy through guest bedrooms for friends, a bunk room and play area for kids, and an outdoor kitchen and deck for communal meals with neighbors.

Two additions extend out of the original structure to meet this need, shaping shared spaces alongside rooms for reflection and privacy. Two decks seamlessly elongate the use of the adjacent spaces for encouraging late-night conversations next to an outdoor kitchen.

The original structure interplays throughout. Reclaimed pine flooring draws the Olympic forest to the interior. The existing brick chimneys blend into this palette, evoking timelessness and strength, representing the unique transformation of the house. The adaptive reuse of the Aldo Beach House sought a careful integration of the familiar with the modern, bringing the old and new together on the shoreline of Hood Canal.

Architect: Wittman Estes 
Design Team: Matt Wittman AIA LEED AP, Jody Estes, Ashton Wesley 
Structural Engineer: J Welch Engineering LLC
Builder: Jack Colgrove Construction
Photography: Andrew Pogue