Field House is a low horizontal pavilion set within a field of native grasses, designed to make the horizon the main event. A quiet roof plane extends beyond a continuous wall of glazing, creating a sheltered edge that softens daylight while keeping the architecture deliberately restrained. From the landscape, the house reads as a single calm line, with reflections and shadow doing as much work as the structure itself.
Inside, the plan is organized as a sequence of open living spaces aligned to the view, supported by warm wood built ins and a limited palette of soft plaster, timber, and stone. Furnishings sit low and composed, allowing the glazing to remain the dominant gesture and the landscape to stay visually present from nearly every position. Sheer curtains filter sun throughout the day, shifting the atmosphere from bright and expansive to quiet and intimate without changing the clarity of the architecture.
A recessed entry compresses the approach before the interior opens fully to the field, reinforcing the transition from enclosure to horizon. Field House is calibrated to feel measured and effortless, less an object in the landscape and more a protected room within it.