Home & Design

The pavilions are angled to mirror the home’s location at a bend in the river, affording each a water view through Hope’s steel window walls. Overhanging roofs protect the glass and outline the shape of the windows.

McInturff extended the home’s material palette of glass, stone, mahogany and steel into the library. A stone chimney incorporates fireplace openings on the first and second levels; a system of delicate cables by Illuminations lights the space without obstructing the views.

The second level boasts rich mahogany flooring. Dubbed “the aerie,” the third-level reading room is accessed via the spiral stair and suspended from the roof. It is framed out entirely in steel and glass, including the floor, and opens onto a balcony overlooking the river.

A spiral staircase of reflective steel with mahogany treads connects the library’s three levels; glass railings ensure transparent views through the adjacent window wall. An additional glass railing borders a book-lined, second-level catwalk.

Under Glass

Conceived by McInturff Architects, a modern aerie in Potomac houses 10,000 books

When Mark McInturff was tapped to design a bold, contemporary dwelling overlooking the Potomac River 15 years ago, he created three volumes sited to mimic a bend in the river below. According to plan, he outfitted the side volumes—or pavilions—for living and sleeping but left the center pavilion an empty shell. Eventually, his firm would complete the home’s centerpiece: a library in the central volume devoted to reading, lounging and gathering amid the owners’ extensive book collection.

In 2017, McInturff Architects launched this final phase. Today, the meticulously detailed, three-story library is the hub of the home—just as the owners envisioned. “They are patient people,” McInturff observes. “They waited until it could it be perfect.”

EXPERT INSIGHTS: Advice from architect Mark McInturff
  • When selecting a material palette, each choice in the design process limits the next. You get to the point where the building tells you what you can do.
  • When planning a home, pay attention to when and where the light will be in every room. Computer models can show the sun’s progress.
  • One way to keep a large home’s scale manageable is to bury one story. I might also break it into parts and proportion those.

 

Architecture: Mark McInturff, FAIA, principal; Peter Noonan, AIA, LEED BD+C, David Mogensen, AIA, LEED AP, project architects, McInturff Architects, Bethesda, Maryland. Builder: Added Dimensions, Inc., Takoma Park, Maryland.

 

 

 

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