Loom House is an considerable renovation of a common 1960s northwest-model home on Bainbridge Island, Washington, positioned on a landscaped bluff overlooking Puget Audio, built by Miller Hull. Image by Kevin Scott

Loom Home is an extensive renovation of a 1960s northwest-design home on Bainbridge Island, Washington, built by the Miller Hull Partnership.

The Loom Home is regarded as the most sustainable in the earth, via accomplishing Living Developing Problem certification, net positive vitality and water, food production, and a rigid supplies Pink List. A photovoltaic process on the south house delivers strength for the overall assets, and battery storage guarantees resilience. Rainwater cisterns and a gray drinking water treatment process ensures resources are conserved.

The 297-m2 (3200-sf) residence is totally renovated to strengthen the building envelope, giving systems and presenting up-to-date interiors, while retaining the unique architecture of the house. A new, 67-m2 (725-sf) detached carport and storage region is additional to the residence. It also features customized home furniture and furnishings produced of purely natural components crafted by local artists creating a comfy inside.

The landscape consists of plantings of Japanese maples, flowering trees, rhododendrons, and azaleas. A new walkway curates a path by the 61-m (200-ft) tall evergreens about an set up of normal stone in a dry stream mattress arrangement. A range of edible berries, vegetables, and a foraging forest provide agriculture for the property.