The roof was envisioned to be a large continuous skin covering the length of the house (which steps down in section) and opens to the low winter sun on the south side and views of the valley on the east. The form of this pre tensioned roof emerges from the ground on the other two sides, creating a cocoon-like experience. During the monsoon, the runoff from this large roof is to be harvested.
The roof structure was inspired by the weave of the basket. As the design evolved, the roof was split in two to draw light into the darker pockets of the house, whereby opening a venue for relationships in scale and shape, between the smaller and larger roof to be explored. The split in the roof was inserted with a truss as a support structure. The final form of the roof has a bulge in the middle where more light is able to enter into the living space of the house, creating a gradually curving higher volume inside and a more intimate, stretched and lower flat volume outside.
The structure of the roof comprises of interlaced steel tubes forming a mesh which are clad with wood on the inside and covered with handcrafted metal shingles outside. The structure would be fabricated off site and reassembled. The structure is made of two kinds of frames; the thicker frame forms the profile of the roof rising from the ground and bends over at the split to hold the lower roof. These frames are held up by columns at an interval of 14 feet, which also tie the roof to the ground to withstand high wind loads. A secondary mesh of thinner tubes wrap over the primary frame to form the surface of the roof.
In order to partition the interior space, the walls were restricted to a height of 7 feet and glass was fixed between the wall and the roof to experience the continuity of the curving wood clad roof surface.
The entrance of the house is through the curved skin that forms the roof and back wall of the house. The expansive view of the entire valley is revealed as one enters the living space. Living and dining spaces open onto the south deck where the infinite vista opens up and one experiences a change in scale as one walks out. All the rooms have been designed to have their own personal decks which face the valley. A staircase near the entrance descends along the roof form looking towards a frame of the scenery.
