Two complete homes on one 2 acre lot in Paradise Valley. The main house sits toward the front of the property, built above the preserved basement. The guest home sits toward the rear, single-story and private. Between them, an open-air pavilion defined by slender steel columns and block walls holds the shared life of the compound: dining, lounge seating, a ping pong table, a television. Each home has its own outdoor kitchen and fireplace. The pavilion is common ground.
The main house echoes midcentury design. Burnished concrete block in a geometric pattern, large pocketing glass doors that dissolve the boundary between the kitchen, dining and living areas and the covered patio beyond. The basement beneath was kept as a flexible space for the boys to grow into, separate from the main living areas above. Seamless indoor-outdoor living to capture the sweeping views of Mummy and Camelback Mountains as well as the Phoenix Mountain Preserve.
The guest home is quieter, with lighter cabinetry, sculptural hardware and a more minimal palette. Each home has its own entry marked by a circular oculus that pulls light into the threshold and tracks the changing of seasons through light and shadow. From the street, the compound reads as a single composition of stucco, burnished concrete block and black metal. The pool, hot tub, pickleball court, desert trail and grass play area are distributed across the property, creating different ways to be together or apart.