| |
|
Welcome!
drw design build strives to create beautiful environments that perform their function and capture the human spirit in unconditioned and refreshing ways. By honoring each material for its intrinsic qualities and allowing informed invention to reach beyond tradition, drw aims to change the utility of shelter into a modern, uplifting sense of place.
drw design build strives to create beautiful environments that perform their function and capture the human spirit in unconditioned and refreshing ways. By honoring each material for its intrinsic qualities and allowing informed invention to reach beyond tradition, drw aims to change the utility of shelter into a modern, uplifting sense of place.
After transferring to the University of Oregon from Syracuse University in 1992, Oregon quickly became my home. To fund my college education I worked construction full time in the summers and part time during the school year and eventually took almost three years off to save for my education efforts. In my time away from school, I worked for a commercial general contractor, spent a year in a custom cabinet shop and eventually moved up to Hood River and worked building houses. In 1995 I became a general contractor and drw design build was born.
My first project was a two car garage with an open barn type space above. Many small remodels followed as I got back into school, and in 1998 I was graduated from the University of Oregon with a Bachelors of Architecture. Following school, I designed and built my first custom home for a client in the south hills of Eugene. In 2000, I moved to Portland, OR, and began my internship with Architect Hans Kretschmer and Green Gables Design and Restoration, a custom residential design build firm. Currently, I am completing my architecture registration exam and hope to be registered in the state of Oregon by the winter of 08.
Ryan Walsh
info@drwdesignbuild.com
503-577-2824
Ryan and Holly Walsh and the S.E. 14th Ave house were featured in the September-October 2007 issue of Oregon Home magazine.
Ryan Walsh was the Grand Prize Winner of the 2008 American Institute of Architects – Dwell sponsored contest “How green are you?” Projects were assessed on their sustainability, functionality, originality, cost effectiveness and design. See the AIA Press Release, OregonLive, dwell magazine and green.msn.com for details.
| S.E. 14th Avenue |
Over the last eight years, working nights and weekends, I have completely gutted my 1925 bungalow in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Portland, Oregon and have remodeled and added to the original structure. This project has been most interesting because of the alternative design approach resulting from tight financial constraints. Instead of the more traditional process of first defining the aesthetic, then purchasing material to construct it, I matched previously collected “scrap” material to my building needs. The reward of this design challenge was reaching the utilitarian goals while honoring the inherent beauty of the materials.
To fully realize the potential of the house and site, I reoriented the interior spaces of the main house, placing the more public parts (kitchen, dining and living) on the south side. As a result of its new arrangement, the house was able to capitalize on simple passive heating/cooling concepts. I then added a shop/garage, master bedroom, and bathroom with in-slab radiant heat. The addition formed a courtyard with the main house, and with extensive landscaping, the exterior space complemented the newly designed interior. This created a strong indoor/outdoor connection.
The house became a collection of various “green” projects, each utilizing recycled materials in uncommon ways. Kitchen cabinets, for example, were made of short scraps collected from three decks. Leftover cabinet doors became a geometrical wall treatment, and cut-offs from structural plywood and interior trim created a closet wall that is art itself. On the exterior of the house is a rain screen made from a collection of old studs that were ripped in half and planed. Most of the studs were originally cut around 1925, so once de-nailed, ripped, and planed, they revealed beautiful material.
My understanding of the built environment is the result of a degree in architecture and working in architecture and design/build firms. Though each of these experiences has been valuable, I have been most inspired by the design process of my own home. By creatively designing new uses for existing materials and by using more of our current construction waste, architects have the ability to greatly diminish our impact and expand the aesthetic of the built environment. Our ultimate challenge is to open the world’s eyes to the beauty and potential of every resource.
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| McShane Residence |
Designed and constructed in 2000-2001, the concept for the original house was to use traditional shapes in a more contemporary language, allowing them to seem as if they had grown out of each other and added to over time. By breaking down the building mass into its pieces, each part of the program is captured by a separate form, giving the house “transparency”. The house is long and thin in the east/west direction, 20 feet wide, offering beautiful daylighting year round. Pat and Carla wanted an open main house with kitchen, dining and living flowing into each other that would allow their whole family to be together, while occupying different spaces. A low shed to the west supports the main floor and holds bath, laundry and office spaces. Upstairs, their two children command their own floor. Finally, Pat and Carla retreat through a small bridge like space off the living room to their bedroom cottage to the east, isolated from the busy main house.
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Woolsey Remodel |
|
The Woolsey House was a traditional 1925 cottage building that needed updating and greater neighbor presence. The original main entrance of the building did not face the street. By adding the canopy and the entrance hall associated with it, the sense of arrival at this house was more clearly developed. The modern character of the entrance complements the sensible existing floor plan without adding ornament that would never have been there originally.
|
| |
|
|
| Belles Residence |
|
This new residence is in Corbett, OR and has uninhibited solar access and dense forest views. At two thousand square feet, the house aims to use photo voltaic panels, solar water heating and rainwater collection to provide for its family of four. Two simple sheds gracefully embrace the sloped site, emblematic of forms used by local agrarian neighbors.
Scheduled for construction fall of 08’
|
| |
|
|
|
| Vancouver Residence |
|
This Vancouver, WA Residence is on a south facing sloped site that overlooks the Columbia River. Existing topography and a south facing view provided a wonderful take off point for this residence. The house stretches its arms in the east-west direction to take advantage of the beautiful natural light and tree filtered views, while working with the existing slope to keep the building mass small.
Scheduled for construction fall of 08’
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
| Coast Residence North |
|
This Cannon Beach residence is on the south end of the coastal town, peering out over neighboring roof tops to see Haystack Rock. While respecting the traditional forms and materials that have been proven to work with the demanding Oregon Coast exposure, this house wanted to stretch the context in which it will be built and set a new precedent. The simple shed is one of the most tradition forms of shelter that exists, but it has not been implemented often in this gabled small town.
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Coast Residence - South |
|
This Residence is directly to the south of the North Coast Residence, and will accompany it in its more modern approach to the beach house form. The two houses have been designed to compliment each other in character, respect each others privacy, and are placed on their sites in order to allow for ample natural light and views from both houses – just like good neighbors should! While the North house is higher in elevation and is outwardly focused to the beach and the ocean beyond to the west, the South house embraces its lower location and the surrounding coastal forest to the east and south and shelters itself from a busy nearby road.
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|