![Foote Farm House / McLeod Kredell Architects - Windows](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/5088/a744/28ba/0d75/2a00/0072/medium_jpg/04_-_East_elevation.jpg?1375474237)
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Architects: McLeod Kredell Architects
- Area: 1 ft²
- Year: 2012
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Photographs:Susan Teare
![Foote Farm House / McLeod Kredell Architects - Windows, Brick, Facade](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/5088/a756/28ba/0d75/7500/00a5/medium_jpg/06_-_West_elevation_-_tucked_in_the_wooded_edge.jpg?1375474261)
Text description provided by the architects. This project in the Champlain Valley of Vermont presented the challenge of making a modern house while faced with restrictive design covenants calling for replication of historic styles. Our goal was to achieve the enduring qualities of architecture, without imitation or quotation.
![Foote Farm House / McLeod Kredell Architects - Windows](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/5088/a741/28ba/0d75/2a00/0071/newsletter/02_-_Northeast.jpg?1375474233)
The brief for this primary residence called for living quarters for a professional couple, a home office, and a strong connection to the surrounding landscape.
![Foote Farm House / McLeod Kredell Architects - Windows, Facade](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/5088/a737/28ba/0d75/2a00/0070/newsletter/05_-_South_elevation_-_axis_of_sun_and_long_view.jpg?1375474223)
The house is a simple bar oriented on the east-west axis, with one end tucked into wooded wetlands and the other reaching out into a meadow. The private spaces of the house are located at the west end, in the trees. The public spaces sit out in the meadow, with a long view to Buck Mountain in the north and solar gain from the south.
![Foote Farm House / McLeod Kredell Architects - Windows](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/5088/a769/28ba/0d75/2a00/0075/newsletter/17_-_dusk.jpg?1375474282)
Working with a tight budget, loft spaces in the gable roof form add bonus area to the 1,200 square foot footprint.
![Foote Farm House / McLeod Kredell Architects - Windows, Door, Chair, Facade](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/5088/a764/28ba/0d75/3e00/00ad/newsletter/15_-_through_gathering.jpg?1375474271)
Given our cold Vermont climate, and the predominance of frugal, boxy buildings in our agrarian landscape, the house is conceived of as a simple volume rather than an assemblage of roof and wall planes. Its ‘volumeness’, so to speak, is emphasized by taut surfaces, edges, and corners; continuity of the outer skin; covered indoor/outdoor spaces that are carved out of the volume, rather than added to it; and glazed openings that are treated as clean incisions in the shell.
![Foote Farm House / McLeod Kredell Architects - Forest](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/5088/a76c/28ba/0d75/3e00/00af/newsletter/18_-_around_bend.jpg?1375474286)
The covered bridge-like house links ‘refuge’ at one end with ‘prospect’ at the other, while letting the sun and view to Buck Mountain pass through the center.
![Foote Farm House / McLeod Kredell Architects - Windows](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/5088/a7a9/28ba/0d75/3e00/00b0/newsletter/section.jpg?1375474292)