.

FOUR EYES HOUSE BY EDWARD OGOSTA ARCHITECTURE



01-Four-Eyes-House-by-Edward-Ogosta-Architecture
“A weekend desert residence for a family and their dog, the Four Eyes House is an exercise in site-specific experiential programming.
02-Four-Eyes-House-by-Edward-Ogosta-Architecture
Rather than planning the house according to a domestic functional program, the building was designed foremost as an instrument for intensifying a number of onsite phenomenal events.
03-Four-Eyes-House-by-Edward-Ogosta-Architecture
Four "sleeping towers" are oriented towards four spatiotemporal viewing experiences: morning sunrise to the east, mountain range to the south, evening city lights to the west, and nighttime stars overhead.
04-Four-Eyes-House-by-Edward-Ogosta-Architecture
Each tower contains a compact top-floor bedroom, sized only for the bed, and each with a unique aperture directed towards the view.
05-Four-Eyes-House-by-Edward-Ogosta-Architecture
These bedrooms are equally-sized and unassigned, such that the family's sleeping locations can be rotated based on each individual's desired viewing experience.
06-Four-Eyes-House-by-Edward-Ogosta-Architecture
Vertical circulation within the towers is similarly particularized (e.g. ladders, spiral stair, switchback stair, or shallow-riser stair).
07-Four-Eyes-House-by-Edward-Ogosta-Architecture
Ground-floor common spaces form a loose connective field between the discrete tower volumes, and offer a more permeable relationship to the landscape.
08-Four-Eyes-House-by-Edward-Ogosta-Architecture
The sensations of sleeping and waking are thus inflected by the building's foregrounding of intensified onsite experiential events.
09-Four-Eyes-House-by-Edward-Ogosta-Architecture
By sleeping in a room elevated off the ground and open to the stars, one might inhabit a deep pocket of silence for a few moments, and perhaps even perceive the movement of the Earth, as it slowly rotates beneath the stars” Edward Ogosta Architecture.
10-Four-Eyes-House-by-Edward-Ogosta-Architecture
The project is been select by the American Institute of Architects to receive the 2013 Small Project Award, now in its tenth year, established to recognize small-project practitioners for the high quality of their work and to promote excellence in small-project design.
11-Four-Eyes-House-by-Edward-Ogosta-Architecture13-Four-Eyes-House-by-Edward-Ogosta-Architecture12-Four-Eyes-House-by-Edward-Ogosta-Architecture

16-Four-Eyes-House-by-Edward-Ogosta-Architecture14-Four-Eyes-House-by-Edward-Ogosta-Architecture15-Four-Eyes-House-by-Edward-Ogosta-Architecture

Location: Coachella Valley, California, USA 
Architect: Edward Ogosta Architecture 
Type: residential 
Year: 2012