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Agate Pass Cabin by Olson Kundig Architects

Olson Kundig principal designs himself a cosy beach cabin

Olson Kundig Architects principal Alan Maskin has renovated and extended a beach cabin from 1938 in Washington State, turning it into his wood-lined retreat.

Agate Pass Cabin overlooks the Agate Passage, a tidal waterway on the Olympic Peninsula. Maskin added a first-floor extension and proper foundations to the old cabin.

Low ceilings have been open up into the old attic

Original wide planks of Douglas fir – a species that was bountiful in the region 100 years ago – still line the walls and ceilings.

Where some panels were taken down to make room for alterations, the wood was refashioned into cabinets or storage or used to line new ceilings.

Panels of original Douglas fir still line the walls

Contrasting wood such as Glulam plywood was chosen for additions to the cabin, to clearly mark what is original 1930s and what is new.

Maskin bought the cabin as a dream renovation project, although it took him years to find the time to work on it after he was made an owner of Olson Kundig Architects.

"My work life and love life were separated by Elliott Bay and a three-hour commute," said Maskin.

"I was looking for a small, extremely inexpensive fixer-upper. In my dreams, I wanted it to be a small cabin with a view of the water – hopefully with some character – and located somewhere in the middle of my two primary destinations."

A screened-in porch has become a dining room at one end

When he heard the cabin had come up for sale he went to view it and realised that he could see Agate Pass if he climbed up on the roof.

"I hired a residential building inspector to check it out and make sure that buying such a rundown house wasn't insane," added Maskin.

"While he was underneath looking at the foundations of the house, I noticed 12 bald eagles flying directly over the house. Let's just say that after that, the inspector's report didn't seem as necessary."

The other side of the former porch is now a study

After years sleeping on a mattress in the cabin's unheated attic while he was busy with Olson Kundig Architects, Maskin finally found the time to redesign the cabin.

New foundations were added, with seismic upgrades as the Pacific Northwest sits on a fault line called the Cascadia subduction zone.

A first floor has been added to the cabin

The low ceiling between the living room and the attic was removed, opening the space up to create a five-metre-high vaulted roof beneath the gables. A wood-burning sits on a raised metal hearth.

A screened-in porch was turned into a dining room and office space with views over the gardens.

The bedroom has views over the Agate Pass

Upstairs, the new first storey houses a wood-lined bedroom with views over the trees and the water.

The gable end is made of and flanked by windows. A cardboard 3D portrait of the American sculptor Ed Kienholz by the local artist Scott Fife hangs over the bed, which Maskin designed himself.

Gulam plywood was used for new additions to the cabin

Maskin also designed the bed and armoire. Above the office space is a first-floor outdoor terrace.

Other artworks on display in Agate Pass Cabin include works by Seattle artists such as Sutton/Beres/Culler, Leiv Fagereng, Karen Rudd, Rebecca Raven, Chris Crites, David Eisenhour, Mary Larson and Klara Glosova.

Seattle-based Olson Kundig Architects was founded in 1967 by Jim Olson. More cabins from the practice include a writer's cabin with drawbridge-style shutters and a narrow yet tall cabin for a family.

Photography is by Aaron Lietz.


Project credits:

Architect: Olson Kundig Architects
Design principal and interior design: Alan Maskin
Project architects: John Kennedy and Hill Pierce
Landscape (hardscapes): Alan Maskin
Landscape (plants): Duane West and Brian McLaughlin
General contractor: Krekow Jennings
Structural engineer: Nic Rossouw, Giraf Design
Lighting design: Niteo

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