Project Details
- Project Name
- Depot House
- Location
- CT
- Architect
- Gray Organschi Architecture
- Project Types
- Single Family
- Size
- 2,800 sq. feet
- Year Completed
- 2012
- Project Status
- Built
Project Description
The Shepaug River Valley Railroad, which ran along the Bantam River in the late 19th century, stopped at this location, once the site of a tiny local train depot. After the closure of the railroad in 1948, two small homes were built on the foundations of the original depot. A pair of architects purchased the property in the late 1990s with the aim of transforming the rural site into a weekend retreat. The two existing homes had deteriorated significantly, but the new owners saved and reinforced the existing 19th century rubble foundation, using it as the base for this new house. Two simple gable structures, oriented perpendicularly to each other, create space for a large open plan between them and refer, through their forms, to neighboring barns and to the region’s agricultural heritage. The house interior is lined with bleached pine; kitchen, dining, living and family rooms overlap each other and create a rich series of spatial experiences that accommodate relaxed weekend living. The living spaces open onto a lap pool which is edged in stone-lined gabion baskets and is surrounded by a cedar deck. Outdoor spaces provide views across the meadow to the Bantam River. The house also features geothermal wells as the primary source of heating for its radiant floor system.