Home Tour
Tour a tranquil prairie home marrying Tudor and modern styles
When the homeowners came to Christopher Strom Architects, they knew what they were looking for: She wanted a Tudor, and he wanted a modern glass box. Undaunted, here’s how the architects united these distinct visions.
For more of the hows and whys behind the design, keep reading.
Tudor exterior
Approaching the home from the road, you get a glimpse of an impressive facade full of architectural details. Dormers, a cedar shake roof, copper flashing, and gutters all add a traditional feel that’s reinforced by the home’s white stucco and black accents. But the windows give a hint that the home isn’t just a re-creation of the classic style.
Even from a distance with the home tucked behind a hill, it’s clear the windows are large scale. And when the home is fully revealed at the end of the driveway, it shows itself to be a lot more modern than expected. “You come around the corner and all of the sudden you can see through the house,” Eric Johnson, Principal and Partner at Christopher Strom Architects said. “It creates a sense of anticipation that makes you want to go inside.”
Anchored by a gable at each end, the home has a neatness that nods to tradition without getting boxed in by its constraints. A dormer perches on the roof above a wall of glass. A two-story window unit fills one gable. The mix of a punched opening and voids lets the home present as both Tudor and modern at once.
The home’s site, in a wide-open prairie, created opportunities for unobstructed views and an abundance of natural light. The flipside is that all sides of the home are exposed. Purposeful site planning helped overcome the challenge. The home tucks into the backside of a hill to avoid dominating the landscape and to provide privacy at the front of the home. Happily, this also focuses attention on the prairie plants populating that hill, providing an ever-changing landscape to observe.
The architects also found ways to add interest to all sides of the home with unexpected window shapes, textures created through varying material types, and distinctive details. To hide mechanicals and utilities, they tucked some into window wells and used landscaping to hide others so every side of the home presents beautifully.






