Spot Whales From the Living Room of This $8M San Juan Island Retreat

Designed by Bohlin Cywinski Jackson, the residence sits between a wooded hillside and the open water, with a glass-walled living room that takes in both.

Designed by Bohlin Cywinski Jackson, this San Juan Island residence sits between a wooded hillside and the open water, with a glass-walled living room that takes in both.

Location: 4415 West Side Road, Friday Harbor, Washington

Price: $7,950,000

Year Built: 2024

Architect: Bohlin Cywinski Jackson

Footprint: 6,483 Square Feet (3 Beds, 3.5 Baths) 

Lot Size: 6 Acres 

From the Firm: "This island residence was designed to offer immersion in a remarkable coastal environment. The six-acre site, on the western coast of San Juan Island, Washington, slopes downhill from a forest of Pacific madrone, alder, and Douglas fir to a rocky coastline overlooking the Haro Strait. Responding to the slope and the extraordinary natural beauty of the site, we tucked the two-story residence against the hillside, creating a modest presence while maximizing views of the ocean and Vancouver Island. Entering the site from above, the driveway turns to reveal a first glimpse of the home’s weathering steel screen and low horizontal roof through the trees. The roof’s rhythmic, interlocking Douglas fir beams rise at the entry and continue inside the home, above a custom bookshelf and closet. A subtle shift in the floor plan focuses views into the living area while maintaining privacy in the primary suite at the far end. Connected kitchen, dining, and living areas provide ample space for cooking and entertaining, and open onto an expansive deck with a pizza oven. The living area is defined by a continuous wall of bookshelves along the eastern side, punctuated by views of the forest uphill, and panoramic views through a wall of glass to the west, shielded from the sun by a deep roof overhang. A custom media cabinet and shelving anchor one end of the living area, while a monumental concrete fireplace with built-in wood storage offers an inviting place to gather on cool evenings. Pendant lights above the dining table are by the Danish designer Jørn Utzon. The main level also includes a primary bedroom suite, positioned to look out over the ocean. The home’s lower level includes guestrooms, a wine room, and flexible studio space."

The San Juan Island Residence occupies six-acres along the western coast of San Juan Island, with 400 feet of shoreline overlooking Haro Strait.

The residence occupies six acres along the western coast of San Juan Island, and it comes with 400 feet of shoreline. 

Photo by Aaron Leitz

The San Juan Island Residence occupies six-acres along the western coast of San Juan Island, with 400 feet of shoreline overlooking Haro Strait. Designed by Bohlin Cywinski Jackson, the back of the home appears tucked into the hillside, while the front opens toward the water.

Designed by Bohlin Cywinski Jackson, the home has a low-profile rear facade, and a glazed front facade that opens toward the water and sunset views. 

Photo by Aaron Leitz

Photo by Aaron Leitz

See the full story on Dwell.com: Spot Whales From the Living Room of This $8M San Juan Island Retreat
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How to Write the Perfect Beach House

The authors of novels set in summery, coastal communities describe why shoreside homes are such a staple of fiction, and how they design ones that feel real.

Welcome to Beach Week, our annual celebration of the best place on Earth.

It’s a sign of summer as sure as longer days and warmer weather: the sudden proliferation of beach reads at the entrance of your local bookstore and neighborhood library. That term can mean many things, but often it’s quite literal, indicating summer-set tales with colorful, eye-catching covers featuring dazzling stretches of sand, inviting umbrellas and Adirondack chairs, and patches of tall grass you can practically hear shushing in the ocean breeze.

And, of course, beach houses.

The beach house is a mainstay of fiction, a trope that cuts across audience age and genre: young adult, romance, women’s fiction, literary fiction, historical fiction, and even the occasional James Patterson thriller all find themselves set in and around them. It’s not a new development, either; paperback bestsellers in the space have been around for decades, like Judy Blume’s 1977 Summer Sisters, set on Martha’s Vineyard, and Iris Rainer Dart’s 1985 Beaches, the source material for the tear-jerker classic movie starring Bette Midler. But the trend has surely been supercharged in recent years by the success of Elin Hildebrand’s Nantucket-set oeuvre and Jenny Han’s The Summer I Turned Pretty, now a wildly successful Amazon show.

"The house was large and gray and white, and it looked like most every other house on the road, but better," says Belly, the protagonist of The Summer I Turned Pretty. "It looked just the way I thought a beach house should look. It looked like home." These settings often serve as a way to tell stories about family—but they lean into the messiness, acknowledging the fact that home is always just a little bit complicated.

Indeed, one of the reasons beach houses are such a staple of fiction is that the setting meets perhaps the number-one requirement for a powerful trope: it offers both familiarity and variety. Every coastal community has its own architecture and its own rhythm, and "the beach" encompasses everything from rutted dirt roads to the Kennedy compound on Hyannis Port. But there are common characteristics from book to book: The fictional beach house isn’t so pristine that you can’t track at least a little sand in on the floor. A perusal of bookstores and library shelves suggest New England and the Outer Banks seem to be particularly popular settings, although California, the Maritimes, and even the Great Lakes do make appearances. Locales like the Gulf Coast are less thoroughly represented: the predominant vibe is less rattan decor, foldable chaise loungers, and button-down fishing shirts, more cedar shake siding, Adirondack chairs, the occasional rollneck sweater, and, of course, enormous clouds of blue hydrangeas.

When author Meg Mitchell Moore was mentally designing the beach house at the center of her new novel, Down With the Shipmans, she knew her location: Jenness Beach in Rye, New Hampshire, which she’d visited previously. She knew the general style of structure in the area—low to the ground, right on the beach—and she knew she wanted a house that had started out as a relatively modest 1960s cottage and grown over the years. So she did some research at the local historical society, chatted with an architect about considerations like zoning laws, and peeked at vacation listings. She knew she definitely needed a distinct outside: "That was super important, because a lot of those homes have a patio, and I had a lot of scenes that are taking place out on the patio."

The result is well-loved and just a little bit ramshackle, with a sunroom full of old board games and a garage full of junk. It’s a house that’s, as she writes, been "expanded, renovated, insulated, shored up," and it’s "decorated in what might optimistically be called ‘cozy chic’ but more accurately ‘jury-rigged haute.’ Rattan baskets hold magazines, throw blankets, the odd doll or toy…. The kitchen, redone fifteen years ago, has the white cabinets and black granite countertops of the time, after white became the new brown but before gray became the new white."

Often, these houses aren’t particularly new, lavish, or large. In The Summer I Turned Pretty, Belly sleeps in their host’s childhood bedroom, with faded calico wallpaper and white furniture; "Everything about my room was old and faded, but I loved that about it. It felt like there might be secrets in the walls, in the four-poster bed, especially in that music box." A sense of ease carries through into the Amazon adaptation: "It isn’t pretentious but rather warm and welcoming. It is the kind of place where you can walk in from the beach and put your sandy feet on the coffee table," Season One set designer Beth Robinson told House Beautiful.

Catherine Newman’s 2024 novel Sandwich tracks one family’s week on Cape Cod, crammed into a rental they’ve returned to for many years. Our introduction to the cottage is particularly frank about the particularities of coastal architecture: We meet narrator Rocky as she’s hovering over her husband, who is plunging the toilet, part of a long-running battle with the ancient septic system. That house is based on one Newman and her family rented for 25 years: "When we rented it, its main boast on VRBO was ‘architect designed,’" she recalls. "That was its main flex. And we were like, who else would have designed it? What kind of a flex is that?" And so rather mentally designing a house from scratch, she took notes for years, thinking she’d like to write about the Cape at some point.

"I just wrote down every quirky thing and every archetypal thing," Newman explains. "The things that are like, oh everybody has this experience at a beach house, and then the really quirky things that were our particular experience that would evoke other people’s quirky experiences anyway. Even if your house that you rent doesn’t smell like mice and coffee, you’ll know what I mean." She gathered up details and experiences: a Scandinavian bowl decorated with enamel mushrooms, a memorably rickety bamboo coffee table, sand all over the floors, wet towels everywhere, the outdoor shower, the beach roses, the troublesome septic system.

The more frustrating aspects, in fact, become tools in the writer’s hands. "If you’re in a classic Cape Cod beach house, there’s going to be a moment where you’re in the outdoor shower, and the sun’s going to be on your face and the sky’s going to be blue and you’re going to smell the beach roses and it’s going to be this sublime experience, and then a minute later you’re going to realize that your grandchild has snapped her foot in a mouse trap because the house is infested with rodents," says Newman. "That kind of up and down, that’s probably what you’re already doing in the story, and so the beach house is going to be a character in the story, and sometimes it’s going to be amazing and sometimes it’s going to be totally constraining."

The fictional beach house is a treasured hand-me-down with a few dings and a bit of flaking paint—but it’s also a bit of a powder keg, too. "Anytime you put a lot of people, especially people who are related, in a relatively small space for a week, it’s really fun to see what happens," says Moore. "I love that a beach house is typically, unless you’re super wealthy, not gigantic, and so you usually have multiple generations of people under one roof for a short amount of time in a way you might not any other place, and you get to watch the fireworks—literal but also figurative fireworks."

"Too many people in too small a space, it’s kind of like a gun in the first act of a play—you know something’s going to happen because everyone is so combustible in that scenario," says Newman. "What I wanted was for a basically functional, harmonious family to nonetheless be compressed into something like revelation."

Not only that, but a family beach house is a place of complicated nostalgia: "You’re probably bringing up memories of things you don’t think about during the year," says Moore. "There might be a seashell that you collected when you were ten years old, and it’s sitting there and it reminds you of something." The result: an argument that would never have happened at a neutrally decorated Airbnb that you’ve never seen before.

The key ingredients are long familiarity and layers of accrued memories: "The kids would always walk in and be like, oh, it smells like the beach house!" says Newman. "You would smell the smell and remember the last year when you walked in and smelled it, which reminds you of the year before that, everything telescoping."

The power of the fictional beach house lies in the juxtaposition: beach houses are an object of escapist fantasy, but at least as they usually appear in fiction, they’re more about weathered, comfortable familiarity rather than polished glamour. At the same time, they’re a way to explore class differences and financial disparities, within communities and within families, people bumping up against each other, often temporarily, dipping in from other worlds. They’re nostalgic, but they make great settings for nuclear family meltdowns about old hurts, or even just bittersweet moments of realization and transition.

The fantasy of the beach house is so established and powerful that authors can turn it upside down, too. Emily Henry’s bestseller Beach Read—currently being adapted for the big screen, starring Phoebe Dynevor and Patrick Schwarzenegger—features a sort of funhouse mirror version where narrator January retreats when her life falls apart. It’s the opposite of a nostalgic haven: It’s a lake cottage she knew nothing about where her father lived an entire double life with his mistress, which she finds out about at his funeral. She says her mother would have decorated it in "creamy, calming neutrals," a classic beach house color palette; instead, it’s got a blue-tiled kitchen described as "funky," hand-painted furniture, a couch covered in mismatched pillows.

But it’s still got cornflower blue shingles and snow-white trim, a "fairy-tale" porch and breeze-tossed beach grass, reminders that this is, after all, a beach read. If you must have a complete emotional crisis—as we all do, once in a while—it might as well be sitting in an Adirondack chair.

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Like a Hat, a Wavy Roof Caps This Beach House in Australia

It swells over a central circulation area, its eaves coming to rest atop two patios on either side.

Houses We Love: Every day we feature a remarkable space submitted by our community of architects, designers, builders, and homeowners. Have one to share? Post it here.

Project Details:

Location: New South Wales, Australia

Architect: Casey Brown Architecture / @caseybrownarchitecture

Footprint: 4,000 square feet

Builder: Lime Building Group

Structural and Civil Engineer: Canterlever Engineers

Landscape Design: Bates Landscaping

Lighting Design: Tovo

Photographer: Zella Casey Brown / @zellacaseybrown

From the Architect: "This home sits on flat land on the edge of a lagoon within a stones throw of a surf beach. It faces north, with panoramic views of wetlands, lime green pastures, and the mountains of the Great Dividing Range. The plan, with its staggered massing and central spine, is private to the street with the recessed garage contrasting the curved exterior of the media room sweeping in to the central front door. Internally, the spine varies in height, punctuated by light shafts as you pass a series of bedrooms leading to the private primary bedroom suite and the northern garden terrace under the large cantilever balcony. The upstairs is slowly revealed as one large living, dining, and kitchen area, with a curved floating timber ceiling rising to the north, taking in the sun and views. Two protruding decks with a fully opening door configuration link inside and outside, while the large cantilever roof protects the northern glazed façade. The floating roof is supported on near-invisible round steel columns, creating a glazed light throughout the upper floor.

"The interior and exterior is all exposed white bricks, rustic long brick at the exterior and more refined internally, with the concrete structure exposed throughout. The geometric, curved roof gently changes angle from the front to the rear gently and is clad in copper. Brass doors, windows, and railings respond to the seaside condition of the site. Throughout the home, the stone floors are all heated electrically and powered by a large solar rooftop array concealed behind the flat roof on the street side and batteries in the garage. This, combined with the double glazing and large roof overhang, responds well to the micro-climate of the South Coast. Meticulously crafted by skilled craftsmen in concrete, bricks, brass, copper, and tallowwood, the home is a very considered response to a very special place."

Photo by Zella Casey Brown

Photo by Zella Casey Brown

Photo by Zella Casey Brown

See the full story on Dwell.com: Like a Hat, a Wavy Roof Caps This Beach House in Australia
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From the Archive: This Tribeca Pad Was One of New York’s First Houses Warmed by Geothermal Energy

Built in 2000, the five-story building served as both office and family home for architect John Petrarca.

Welcome to From the Archive, a look back at stories from Dwell’s past. This story previously appeared in the June 2003 issue.

"People call it ‘mystery heat’ because the source is unclear," says John Petrarca, architect and owner of a five-story experiment in sustainable design that sits in the heart of Tribeca, at 156 Reade Street. You don’t normally expect to find cutting-edge sustainable design in a place like Manhattan, but Petrarca and his design/build firm have gone against the flow in this city of vertical excess. Instead of looking up, Petrarca looks down. The mystery heat that keeps his house a comfortable 70 degrees on a freezing day in February is drawn from deep within the earth using a system called GeoExchange, in which heat is captured from the earth, compressed, and then released inside the house through flexible plastic tubing embedded in the floors.

"It’s a pioneering venture," explains Petrarca, "the first of its kind in New York. It uses the least amount of energy and produces the least amount of pollution."

Petrarca is used to working with innovative and unconventional building methods. After studying architecture at Carnegie Mellon, he worked for the Peace Corps in Morocco, where he built housing and community infrastructure, learning to improvise with a minimum of means and materials. For 156 Reade, his firm designed everything from the building to the furniture.

Petrarca and his wife, Sarah Bartlett, a journalism professor, had renovated a building at 158 Reade Street when they moved to Tribeca in 1980. When that proved too small for their growing family, they moved in 2000 up the block to 156, demolished a derelict building that stood on the site, and erected a new one. From the outside, it’s a handsome black-painted grid that echoes the neighborhood’s cast-iron architecture but in a distinctly modern way. Its 19-ton steel facade was prefabricated as a single unit by T-2 Iron Works for around $60,000, trucked to the site, and lifted into place with a crane. The ground floor is the studio and office; the upper floors are private living areas for the Petrarca family.

"Inside we wanted modern, free-flowing spaces with an emphasis on natural light," says Petrarca, who designed the interiors with a minimum of synthetic materials to avoid toxicity and sick-building syndrome. Indeed, the Petrarca house is a micromanaged environment, with thermostats in every room, vents for cooling, and sophisticated filtration devices for both air and water. At one point in our conversation, a ventilation fan begins to whir when it shouldn’t and Petrarca jumps up to make an adjustment. He explains that the HEPA air filtration system is so effective that, in the aftermath of 9/11, hardly any dust was able to penetrate the building, which is located just a few blocks north of Ground Zero. As an eerie after-effect of that infamous day, the house now gets afternoon sunlight that was once blocked by the Twin Towers.

As Petrarca leads me downstairs, into the bowels of the system, I begin to wonder why everyone in New York isn’t following his lead, especially after such a cold winter. Why not dip a straw into Mother Earth and suck up some of her free thermal love? But when I see the equipment room, I change my mind. I had imagined a pipe sticking out of the ground, gurgling with warm water, but it looks more like the command center for a nuclear submarine. A row of heat pumps/chillers make soft whooshing sounds, like muffled dishwashers. Petrarca points lovingly to a newly installed piece of hardware: a multihead "smart" manifold with plastic flow controllers for balancing water temperature. Computer controlled relays are used for modulating the flow of water throughout the house. I am duly impressed but also intimidated by so much equipment. He reassures me that GeoExchange systems don’t have to be so complicated. "We’re constantly adjusting and fine tuning here, trying to squeeze out every ounce of energy and make it as efficient as possible," he says. "It can be done much more simply."

See more from the Dwell archive on US Modernist.

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Land Ho! For $1M, You Can Score a Chesapeake Bay Lighthouse

Built in 1891 and fully restored in 2005, the working beacon doubles as an off-grid residence.

The exterior has been fully restored and repainted in its signature bold red.

Location: Chesapeake Bay, Hamptons Road, Virginia 

Price: $995,000

Year Built: 1891

Renovation Year: 2005

Footprint: 1,251-square-foot interior; 1,128-square-foot exterior deck spaces

From the Agent: "Middle Ground Lighthouse is a privately owned offshore lighthouse residence located in Hampton Roads, Virginia. Built in 1891 and still serving as an active navigational aid, the lighthouse was acquired by its current owners in 2005 and carefully restored over two decades into a fully functioning off-grid residence. Following its purchase from the federal government in 2005, the lighthouse entered a new chapter of private stewardship. Ten engineers from the Billingsley and Gonsoulin families, supported by Eddie Prokop and a close network of friends, devoted more than 7,000 hours and over $300,000 to its rehabilitation. The work addressed both structural integrity and livability. In addition to extensive repairs, the team restored the rainwater collection systems, cisterns, plumbing, and pumps. The property now includes hot and cold pressurized water, a propane gas range, water heating, solar panels, a 10-kilowatt diesel generator, and 15 kilowatts of lithium phosphate battery storage supporting HVAC, lighting, and essential systems, along with a USCG-approved sanitation system. As with any offshore historic property, continued ownership requires ongoing maintenance and thoughtful stewardship. The rehabilitation ensured the lighthouse’s stability and functionality; its preservation remains an active responsibility."

The sellers are seeking offers in excess of $750,000, in the $1M range.

The off-grid lighthouse is located in Chesapeake Bay.

Photo courtesy of middlegroundlight.com

The exterior has been fully restored and repainted in its signature bold red.

The exterior has been fully restored and repainted in its signature bold red.

Photo courtesy of middlegroundlight.com

Photo courtesy of middlegroundlight.com

See the full story on Dwell.com: Land Ho! For $1M, You Can Score a Chesapeake Bay Lighthouse
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For These Standout Waterfront Homes on the Jersey Shore, Trim Takes Center Stage

A third-generation homebuilder shares time-tested insights for crafting exceptionally durable (and beautiful) coastal residences.

For Robert L. Monetti, owner of New Jersey-based Monetti Custom Homes, building is in his blood. A third-generation homebuilder, Monetti proudly carries forth the legacy of his grandfather, the son of an Italian immigrant, who established the family business in 1948 building a custom colonial-style home in Union, New Jersey, alongside his two sons.

A gracious covered porch and intricate trim details define this custom shingle-style home. Frieze boards, moldings, and window trim—including the surround for an oval picture window at the front entry—are all rendered in AZEK product.

A gracious covered porch and intricate trim details define this custom shingle-style home. Frieze boards, moldings, and window trim—including the surround for an oval picture window at the front entry—are all rendered in AZEK product.

Courtesy of Monetti Custom Homes

Two generations later, Monetti continues to build upon the groundwork laid by his grandfather—and his own father, who made the decision to relocate to coastal New Jersey in the 1970s to start a new chapter of the Monetti family business focused specifically on waterfront building. For decades since then, Monetti has continued this tradition of building high-quality custom homes on the Jersey Shore.

Waterfront construction necessitates careful attention to the way in which exterior materials are selected and assembled.

The complexity of waterfront construction necessitates careful attention to the way in which exterior materials are selected and assembled.

Courtesy of Monetti Custom Homes

"Growing up on the river, I developed an awareness early on of how harsh the effects of a brine environment had on everything from corroded hardware to relentless wind-driven Nor’easter storms," says Monetti of his upbringing in the waterfront community of Toms River. "Those experiences shaped how we approach building today, with a heightened focus on durability and protection." 

When looking to integrate architectural details such as dentil molding or corbels, the versatility of AZEK Trim and Moldings allows Monetti and team to easily implement these profiles in water-resistant PVC instead of traditional wood.

When looking to integrate architectural details such as dentil molding or corbels, the versatility of AZEK Trim and Moldings allows Monetti and team to easily implement these profiles in water-resistant PVC instead of traditional wood. "This allows us to achieve both classic and contemporary detailing with greater precision and longevity," says Monetti.

Courtesy of Monetti Custom Homes

See the full story on Dwell.com: For These Standout Waterfront Homes on the Jersey Shore, Trim Takes Center Stage
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Is Sweden’s Purple Crystal Sauna Making Climate Change… Fun?

The tongue-in-cheek installation anchors a "climate action" park along the Skellefte River, a revitalized green space where visitors can recharge and consider the future all at once.

The first line of T.S. Eliot’s seminal modernist poem "The Waste Land" is a prickly reversal of the first line in Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales, turning April from a month of healing to one of cruelty. It is in that vibrating tension that Wasteland, a climate-focused art park in Skellefteå in northeastern Sweden, lives; the park, which opened on May 28, aims to expose, nurture, and even satirize conversations around global climate change.

Wasteland sits on the banks of the Skellefte River in Scharins, a once-highly polluted industrial area that has recently undergone a sanitization and transformation that both confronts and subverts its Byzantine history. Known as Guldstaden ("Gold Town") for its gold mines, the city’s current major industries include copper mining and lithium-ion battery cell manufacturing. Not exactly the spot you’d expect green dreams to flourish; you’d be more likely to find Blinky the three-eyed fish from The Simpsons. But the climate park is recasting the site with temporary art exhibitions, an observation tower created in collaboration with the Oslo School of Architecture and Design, and—its central landmark—a sauna designed by renowned Swedish art duo Bigert & Bergström, made of gleaming magenta, titanium-plated steel and emerging from the ground in the shape of a giant cluster of lithium crystals.

Swedish design studio Bigerts & Bergström created a crystal-shaped sauna for WasteLand, a
WasteLand sits on the TK river, once polluted from gold mining and TK.
The titanium sauna is designed after lithium crystals, a commentary on the area’s lithium manufacturing industry.

See the full story on Dwell.com: Is Sweden’s Purple Crystal Sauna Making Climate Change… Fun?