Architectural Record
search
cart
facebook twitter linkedin youtube
  • Sign In
  • Subscribe
  • Sign Out
  • My Account
Architectural Record
  • NEWS
    • Latest News
    • Awards
    • Interviews
    • Obituaries
    • Podcasts
      • Design:Ed Podcast
      • Sponsored Podcasts
  • OPINION
    • Book Reviews / Excerpts
    • Exhibition Reviews
    • Forum
  • EXCLUSIVES
    • Videos
    • Design Vanguard
    • Top 300 Firms
    • Sponsored Content
    • Sponsored eBooks
    • From the Archives
  • CONTINUING ED
    • Editorial Continuing Ed
    • CE Center
    • CE Academies
  • PROJECTS
    • Buildings By Type
    • Reuse & Renovation
    • Museums & Arts Centers
    • Colleges & Universities
    • Multifamily Housing
    • Interiors
    • Lighting
    • Kitchen & Bath
  • HOUSES
    • Record Houses
    • House of the Month
    • Featured Houses
  • PRODUCTS
    • Products by Category
    • Record Products of the Year
    • Latest Products
  • EVENTS
    • Dates & Events
    • Record on the Road
    • Innovation Conference
    • Sustainability in Practice
    • Women In Architecture
    • Webinars
    • Ad Excellence Awards
    • Submit an Event
  • CONNECT
    • Ask RECORD AI
    • Newsletters
    • Contact
    • Advertise
    • Editorial Calendar
    • Store
    • Customer Service
  • SUBMIT
    • Submission Guidelines
    • RECORD Competitions
  • MAGAZINE
    • Subscribe
    • My Account
    • Digital Edition
    • Current Issue
    • Firm Pass
    • Historic Archive
Residential ArchitectureRecord Houses

Dutchess County Residence, Main House by Allied Works

Dutchess County, New York

By William Hanley
The angular but snaking volumes of the Dutchess County Residence allow indoor and outdoor spaces to overlap —with the bedrooms cantilevering over both the entry and a patio in the rear of
The angular but snaking volumes of the Dutchess County Residence allow indoor and outdoor spaces to overlap —with the bedrooms cantilevering over both the entry and a patio in the rear of the house. Polished stainless-steel screens and a glass skin reflect the surrounding landscape.
 
Photo Jeremy Bittermann/© Allied Works Architecture
The angular but snaking volumes of the Dutchess County Residence allow indoor and outdoor spaces to overlap'with the bedrooms cantilevering over both the entry and a patio in the rear of the house. Po
The angular but snaking volumes of the Dutchess County Residence allow indoor and outdoor spaces to overlap'with the bedrooms cantilevering over both the entry and a patio in the rear of the house. Polished stainless-steel screens and a glass skin reflect the surrounding landscape.
 
Photo © Jeremy Bittermann
The angular but snaking volumes of the Dutchess County Residence allow indoor and outdoor spaces to overlap —with the bedrooms cantilevering over both the entry and a patio in the rear of
The angular but snaking volumes of the Dutchess County Residence allow indoor and outdoor spaces to overlap —with the bedrooms cantilevering over both the entry and a patio in the rear of the house. Polished stainless-steel screens and a glass skin reflect the surrounding landscape.
 
Photo Jeremy Bittermann/© Allied Works Architecture
The clients commissioned a mural by Franz Ackermann for a double-height family room.
The clients commissioned a mural by Franz Ackermann for a double-height family room.
 
Photo Jason Schmidt/© Allied Works Architecture
Heavily veined Linac marble gives a second-floor bathroom graphic visual punch.
Heavily veined Linac marble gives a second-floor bathroom graphic visual punch.
 
Photo Jason Schmidt/© Allied Works Architecture
In the entry hall, Cornelia Parker&#8217;s lightbox, <em>Blue Shift</em>, 2001 (shown unilluminated on this page), is set into a wall, while Rob Pruitt&#8217;s <em>People Feeder: 4</em>, 2010, a stack
In the entry hall, Cornelia Parker’s lightbox, Blue Shift, 2001 (shown unilluminated on this page), is set into a wall, while Rob Pruitt’s People Feeder: 4, 2010, a stack of painted tires topped by a candy dish, stands under a twisting stair with stainless-steel balusters. Orange extension cords dangle down from Untitled (One Wheel Chandelier), 2004, a work by Jason Rhoades, which hangs above the stair.
 
Photo © Architectural Record
Doug Aitken's video projection, <em>Lighthouse</em>, 2007, envelopes the house.
Doug Aitken's video projection, Lighthouse, 2007, envelopes the house.
 
Photo Brian Doyle / courtesy 303 Gallery, Galerie Eva Presenhuber, Victoria Miro Gallery, Regen Projects
Doug Aitken's video projection, <em>Lighthouse</em>, 2007, envelopes the house.
Doug Aitken's video projection, Lighthouse, 2007, envelopes the house.
 
Photo Brian Doyle / courtesy 303 Gallery, Galerie Eva Presenhuber, Victoria Miro Gallery, Regen Projects
Doug Aitken's video projection, <em>Lighthouse</em>, 2007, envelopes the house.
Doug Aitken's video projection, Lighthouse, 2007, envelopes the house.
 
Photo Jason Schmidt/© Allied Works Architecture
Rachel Harrison's gloppy sculpture adorned with a Chinese take-out menu, <em>Signature Roll</em>, 2010, holds its own in front of a double-height living room window with views to the Catskill Mountain
Rachel Harrison's gloppy sculpture adorned with a Chinese take-out menu, Signature Roll, 2010, holds its own in front of a double-height living room window with views to the Catskill Mountains. Rudolf Stingel's painting, Untitled (Plan B), 2008, anchors the opposite wall.
 
Photo Jason Schmidt/© Allied Works Architecture
Mel Bochner's <em>To Count: Intransitive</em>, 2011, forms the glazing around one of the house's light wells.
Mel Bochner's To Count: Intransitive, 2011, forms the glazing around one of the house's light wells.
 
Photo © Jeremy Bittermann
<em>Untitled (One Wheel Chandelier)</em>, 2004, by Jason Rhoades hangs above the stair and in front of Mel Bochner's <em>To Count: Intransitive</em>, 2011.
Untitled (One Wheel Chandelier), 2004, by Jason Rhoades hangs above the stair and in front of Mel Bochner's To Count: Intransitive, 2011.
 
Photo © Architectural Record
Originally created with soap on a shop window during a performance in the 1970s, the permanent version of Mel Bochner's <em>To Count: Intransitive</em> installed in the house, emblazons surrounding wa
Originally created with soap on a shop window during a performance in the 1970s, the permanent version of Mel Bochner's To Count: Intransitive installed in the house, emblazons surrounding walls with sequential numbers when daylight shines through the glass.
 
Photo © Architectural Record
The master bedroom cantilevers over an outdoor patio and has views to the Catskill Mountains.
The master bedroom cantilevers over an outdoor patio and has views to the Catskill Mountains.
 
Photo © Architectural Record
A living room/guest bedroom on the second floor opens out on to a terrace.
A living room/guest bedroom on the second floor opens out on to a terrace.
 
Photo © Architectural Record
Two smaller bedrooms overlook the pool.
Two smaller bedrooms overlook the pool.
 
Photo © Architectural Record
Two smaller bedrooms overlook the pool.
Two smaller bedrooms overlook the pool.
 
Photo © Architectural Record
Foyer
Foyer
 
Photo © Architectural Record
Library
Library
 
Photo © Architectural Record
Library
Library
 
Photo © Architectural Record
Lips carved in the ceilings of the double-height spaces conceal lighting for the artwork on display.
Lips carved in the ceilings of the double-height spaces conceal lighting for the artwork on display.
 
Photo © Architectural Record
Kitchen
Kitchen
 
Photo © Architectural Record
Allied Works designed a series of 17 sheds to conceal the projectors for Doug Aitken's <em>Lighthouse</em>, 2007.
Allied Works designed a series of 17 sheds to conceal the projectors for Doug Aitken's Lighthouse, 2007.
 
Photo © Architectural Record
Dutchess County Residence, Main House
Image courtesy Allied Works Architecture
Dutchess County Residence, Main House
Image courtesy Allied Works Architecture
The angular but snaking volumes of the Dutchess County Residence allow indoor and outdoor spaces to overlap&#8202;&#8212;with the bedrooms cantilevering over both the entry and a patio in the rear of
The angular but snaking volumes of the Dutchess County Residence allow indoor and outdoor spaces to overlap'with the bedrooms cantilevering over both the entry and a patio in the rear of the house. Po
The angular but snaking volumes of the Dutchess County Residence allow indoor and outdoor spaces to overlap&#8202;&#8212;with the bedrooms cantilevering over both the entry and a patio in the rear of
The clients commissioned a mural by Franz Ackermann for a double-height family room.
Heavily veined Linac marble gives a second-floor bathroom graphic visual punch.
In the entry hall, Cornelia Parker&#8217;s lightbox, <em>Blue Shift</em>, 2001 (shown unilluminated on this page), is set into a wall, while Rob Pruitt&#8217;s <em>People Feeder: 4</em>, 2010, a stack
Doug Aitken's video projection, <em>Lighthouse</em>, 2007, envelopes the house.
Doug Aitken's video projection, <em>Lighthouse</em>, 2007, envelopes the house.
Doug Aitken's video projection, <em>Lighthouse</em>, 2007, envelopes the house.
Rachel Harrison's gloppy sculpture adorned with a Chinese take-out menu, <em>Signature Roll</em>, 2010, holds its own in front of a double-height living room window with views to the Catskill Mountain
Mel Bochner's <em>To Count: Intransitive</em>, 2011, forms the glazing around one of the house's light wells.
<em>Untitled (One Wheel Chandelier)</em>, 2004, by Jason Rhoades hangs above the stair and in front of Mel Bochner's <em>To Count: Intransitive</em>, 2011.
Originally created with soap on a shop window during a performance in the 1970s, the permanent version of Mel Bochner's <em>To Count: Intransitive</em> installed in the house, emblazons surrounding wa
The master bedroom cantilevers over an outdoor patio and has views to the Catskill Mountains.
A living room/guest bedroom on the second floor opens out on to a terrace.
Two smaller bedrooms overlook the pool.
Two smaller bedrooms overlook the pool.
Foyer
Library
Library
Lips carved in the ceilings of the double-height spaces conceal lighting for the artwork on display.
Kitchen
Allied Works designed a series of 17 sheds to conceal the projectors for Doug Aitken's <em>Lighthouse</em>, 2007.
Dutchess County Residence, Main House
Dutchess County Residence, Main House
April 16, 2014

Architects & Firms

Allied Works Architecture

“What if the architecture became a black hole?” pondered artist Doug Aitken after he was invited to plan a permanent installation for a collector’s rural property in upstate New York. “What if the house became a place where time could speed up and slow down?”

For a little more than a year, Aitken shot video of the hills, meadows, and woods around the site—as well as a sunrise or two—while the house, by Brad Cloepfil and his firm, Allied Works, was still in the design phase. He edited the scenes into a season-scrambling montage: a lingering shot of grasses in summer, a close-up of an autumn leaf, snow-covered branches, and so on in a long, continuous loop. Then he worked with the architect to project the work onto the completed house, wrapping its exterior.

Additional Content:
Jump to credits & specifications

The effect erases all but the abstract geometry of the architecture, replacing the house with glowing impressions of the landscape that have their own sense of time. “I love the idea of being there in winter, and on the structure there’s an image of a snowbank, but then suddenly, it accelerates into an Indian summer,” says Aitken.

Cloepfil’s architecture can appear equally mercurial. The project began with a 400-acre estate owned by a couple with a large art collection. Allied Works designed an “art barn” for the property to house rotating exhibitions of work from their collection, and then a guesthouse tucked into the woods. For the main house, the firm chose a site on a hill at the head of a meadow with panoramic views of the landscape and, to the west, the Catskill Mountains.

The 6,200-square-foot house is a two-story steel structure with a basement. Its two angular volumes stack on top of one another to create a squared-off figure eight—or as the firm describes it, an “orthogonal helix”—that wraps around two light wells. The form is simple, but difficult to read in its entirety from any one sight line, giving it a dynamic, shifting appearance as you move around it. “I’ve always thought about the house as a knot binding itself together with the landscape,” says Cloepfil. The structure also ties together the project’s sometimes conflicting purposes: to show the art collection—and, in the case of the Aitken work, be the art—while providing a comfortable weekend house with great views of the countryside. It’s a first-world problem par excellence, but one that the designers solved deftly.

Every room contains objects from the owners’ collection and reflects their distinct but wide-ranging taste. To accommodate large-scale work, the designers placed double-height spaces—a family room, living room, and foyer—at the points where the second floor crosses over the first. At the center of the house, a formal entry opens onto a slender stair—made from wood and reflective stainless steel—that curves in counterpoint to the building’s angular form. Upstairs, a work by Mel Bochner is integrated into the glazing around one of the light wells. Strings of sequential numbers rubbed into translucent glass panes, To Count: Intransitive, 2011, is a permanent version of a performance work originally done with soapy windows. To support all of the art on view in the house, a 24-inch-high utility space between its two stories contains the electrical, climate control, and security systems needed to meet conservation—and insurance—standards.

But the house doesn’t feel like a museum. Allied Works balanced the drama of the open spaces with a restrained, domestic scale. Downstairs, a lower-ceilinged kitchen, dining room, and library slip in between the double-height spaces. Circulation flows around smaller, rectangular volumes set between rooms. They contain ancillary spaces—for bathrooms, a fireplace, storage, electrical and mechanical systems—and provide moments of compression that allow the interiors to feel open but not vast.

The three bedrooms upstairs are modest in size by the standards of a big-budget country home—the scale is more apartment than manse—though the house is appointed with a furniture collection to rival the art (Allied Works designed the beds and a dining room table). The bedrooms cantilever 40 feet over an entry court on one side and an outdoor living room with views of the mountains on the other. Michael van Valkenburgh Associates, the landscape architect for the estate, selected graphic, heavily veined marble slabs for the patios and pool deck, but the size and siting of the outdoor spaces keep the hefty material from appearing too severe.

During the design process, the tension between the collection and the architecture was most pronounced when it came to the facade, with the client asking for more wall space and Cloepfil advocating for glazing to maximize views. The compromise they found gave the building a distinctive skin. The entire house is covered in glass panels. Some are back-painted, to conceal structural bracing that supports the cantilevers and to provide interior walls for hanging art. Other panes are etched with vertical stripes. And, at key points, the glass is transparent to open commanding perspectives on the landscape.

The facade reflects the countryside and the sky on every side, contributing to the house’s slippery, mirage-like profile. Its illusory aspect is heightened when the sun goes down, and the Aitken projections turn on, overwriting the form almost completely. “The natural light and what it does to the house goes away, and this other light comes up,” says Cloepfil. “The house has this whole other conversation with the landscape.”

This is not the first country house to orchestrate its own vanishing—Philip Johnson’s Connecticut home comes to mind. But if the Glass House took Modernist transparency to its fetishistic conclusion, the Dutchess County House updates the impulse to disappear for a digital culture. Less of a transparent box, it is an iPhone screen—a magic piece of glass with a tangible material presence that also creates the illusion of expansiveness with its capacity to display seemingly boundless imagery. The house provides both architect and artist with a device for presenting their distinct responses to the site using the same glossy surface. It also gives the clients a surprisingly cozy place to spend time with the landscape—and their art.

CLOSE-UP: Lighting the Lighthouse

Doug Aitken tailored his work Lighthouse, 2007, to the geometry of the Dutchess County Residence. After projection tests with the glazing selected by Allied Works and the homeowners, the artist collaborated with the firm to position 17 custom-calibrated projectors around the site, each enclosed in a doghouse-size stainless-steel shed designed by the architects. Blackout shades lower to create near-uniform conditions on the facade, while a large portion of a basement-level electronics room is dedicated to the system that runs the piece. According to the clients, its performance can be spotty, but, they add, managing the complex technical requirements and maintenance is just part of owning an ambitious work, and the effect is well worth the effort. For Aitken, it marks a departure from his public architectural installations. Unlike his large-scale work for urban museum facades (including one at the Seattle Art Museum, also designed by Allied Works), Lighthouse is visible only to the owners and invited guests who make the pilgrimage to see it. “It’s a strangely hallucinogenic space that’s out there in the landscape like an earthwork,” says Aitken.

Dutchess County Residence, Main House
Dutchess County Residence, Main House
Dutchess County Residence, Main House
Photos: Jason Schmidt/' Allied Works Architecture (top); Brian Doyle / courtesy 303 Gallery, Galerie Eva Presenhuber, Victoria Miro Gallery, Regen Projects (above and middle)

Size: 6,200 square feet

Cost: withheld

Completion date: 2012


People

Architect:

Allied Works Architecture
12 W. 27th Street
New York, NY 10001
212.431.9476

Personnel in architect's firm who should receive special credit:

Brad Cloepfil, RA ' Design Principal
Kyle Lommen ' Principal in Charge
John Clappi ' Project Archtiect
Project team: Meredith Kole, Mark Watanabe, Dori Raskin, Aron Himmelfarb, Lara Shihab-Edlin

 

Architect of record:

Allied Works Architecture

 

Interior designer:

Lisa Frazar, Studio Frazar

 

Landscape Architect:

Michael van Valkenburgh & Associates

 

Engineer(s):

Robert Silman Associates (structural)
Paggi, Martin & Del Bene LLP (civil)
The Salamone Group (formerly Tucker Associates Consulting Engineering) (MEP)

 

Consultant(s):

Lighting:

George Sexton & Associates

Acoustical:

Jaffe Holden

Other:

Audio Video Systems (a/v consultant)
Worldstage (formerly Scharff Weisberg) (art projection consultant)
R.A. Heintges Architects (curtainwall)

We collaborated with several artists on the project, including:

Doug Aitken, Light-house
Mel Bochner, To Count: Intransitive

 

General contractor:

Berkshire Wilton Partners

 

Photographer(s):

Jeremy Bittermann
Jason Schmidt

 

Products

Structural system

Wood frame construction

 

Exterior cladding

Moisture barrier:
Bithuthene Waterproofing Membrane 4000

Curtain wall:
Neversink Glass Corp (installer)
System a modified version of Shucco product and etched glass by Cricursa. Clear glass from Viracon.

Roofing

Other:
American Hydrotech Liquid Membrane fluid-applied membrane roofing

 

Doors

Upswinging doors, other:
Nana Wall Systems (folding glass/aluminum doors at pool level)

 

Interior finishes

Paints and stains:
Benjamin Moore

 
KEYWORDS: New York

Share This Story

Looking for a reprint of this article?
From high-res PDFs to custom plaques, order your copy today!

Post a comment to this article

Report Abusive Comment

Subscription Center
  • Create an Account
  • Start a Subscription
  • Manage My Account
  • Sign Up for Newsletters
  • Visit Customer Service
  • Update Preferences

More Videos

Sponsored Content

Sponsored Content is a special paid section where industry companies provide high quality, objective, non-commercial content around topics of interest to the Architectural Record audience. All Sponsored Content is supplied by the advertising company and any opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and not necessarily reflect the views of Architectural Record or its parent company, BNP Media. Interested in participating in our Sponsored Content section? Contact your local rep!

close
  • TAMLYN XtremeTrim Exterior Trim
    Sponsored byTamlyn

    Designing Cleaner Panel Facades: Why Exterior Trim Details Matter

  • Building with Vapor Barriers
    Sponsored byReef Industries, Inc.

    Vapor Barriers Help Control Moisture in Tighter Building Designs

  • Duct Interior with Prodeq System
    Sponsored byHenry, a Carlisle Company

    Designing Resilient Water Containment Systems

DESIGN:ED Podcast
Listen to Architectural Record’s DESIGN:ED Podcast

Events

June 10, 2026

Rethinking Stormwater – The Power of Porous Paving

Credits: 1 AIA LU/HSW; 1 AIBD P-CE; 0.1 ICC CEU

Learn how porous paving systems support stormwater management, reduce heat island effects, and enhance sustainable site design performance.

June 11, 2026

Very Early Warning Fire Detection for Mission-Critical Facilities

Credits: 1 AIA LU/HSW; 1 AIBD P-CE; 0.1 ICC CEU

Examine advanced fire detection strategies that support uptime and enhance safety in data centers and other mission-critical facilities.

View All Submit An Event

Products

2026 Architect's Square Foot Costbook

2026 Architect's Square Foot Costbook

See More Products

Popular Stories

Practice Matters illustration

What’s in a (Firm’s) Name? Thinking About Succession and Legacy

Coronado Bridge

The Architect’s Guide to San Diego

Practice Matters illustration

By the Numbers: Counting America's Architects

Riverdale House by Studio Lau

Riverdale House by Studio Lau

KRESA by DLR

In Kalamazoo, DLR Group Completes a Mass-Timber Hub for Career and Technical Education Programs

Broader Sustainability of CMU - Free Webinar - May 21, 2026

Related Articles

  • Dutchess-County-Guest-House

    Dutchess County Guest House by Allied Works

    See More
  • Museum of Arts and Design

    Museum of Arts and Design (Jerome and Simona Chazen Building) by Allied Works

    See More
  • Clyfford Still Museum by Allied Works

    See More

Related Products

See More Products
  • iconic house.jpg

    The Iconic House

See More Products
×

The latest news and information

#1 Source for Architectural Design, News and Products

SUBSCRIBE
  • RESOURCES
    • Advertise
    • Contact Us
    • Submit
    • Store
  • ACCOUNT CENTER
    • Create an Account
    • Start a Subscription
    • Manage My Account
    • Sign Up for Newsletters
    • Visit Customer Service
    • Update Preferences
  • PRIVACY
    • PRIVACY POLICY
    • TERMS & CONDITIONS
    • DO NOT SELL MY PERSONAL INFORMATION
    • PRIVACY REQUEST
    • ACCESSIBILITY
  • SERVICES
    • Marketing Services
    • Reprints
    • Market Research
    • List Rental
    • Survey/Respondent Access
  • STAY CONNECTED
    • Linkedin
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • X (Twitter)

Copyright ©2026. All Rights Reserved BNP Media, Inc. and BNP Media II, LLC.

Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development :: ePublishing