
Millerton Farmhouse
ARCHITECTS
Olson Kundig
PHOTOGRAPHER
Richard Barnes, Nic Lehoux
PROJECT TEAM
Tom Kundig, FAIA, RIBA, Design Principal; Mark Olthoff, AIA, LEED® AP, Project Manager; Dawn McConaghy, AIA, LEED® AP BD+C, Project Architect; Matthew Hostetler, LEED® AP, Architectural Staff; Debbie Kennedy, LEED® AP ID+C, Interior Design; Ana Brainard, Interior Design Staff; Phil Turner, Gizmo Design
KEY CONCLUSION
United Construction & Engineering Inc., General Contractor; Rennia Engineering Design PLLC, Civil Engineer; Devore Associates, Landscape Architect; Berlinghoff Electrical Contracting Inc., Electrical Engineer; Silman, Structural Engineer; William Perotti & Sons Inc., Mechanical Engineer; Renfro Design Group, Lighting design,Old farm nursary, Plant selection & installation
AREA
5000 sqft - 10,000 sqft
YEAR
2016
LOCATION
Millerton, NY, United States
CATEGORY
Residential › Private House
“The concept was a farmhouse compound with a series of buildings attached by walkways. In that regard, it had to feel like it fit into the farmland vernacular of upstate New York, but with a modern architectural language.” –Tom Kundig, FAIA, RIBA, Design Principal
Located on 25 acres of farmland in upstate New York, this family retreat is a modern take on the traditional farmhouse.
The home combines contemporary detailing and materials such as blackened steel and concrete with vernacular agricultural building forms.

A careful attention to spatial and volumetric relationships allows the home to feel both modern and contextually appropriate for its rural farmland setting.
The home’s pitched roofs reference archetypal barn forms, and exterior materials continue this dialogue with agricultural architecture.
The siding is reclaimed barnwood sourced from local historic barns that had been dismantled.

Exterior concrete walls and zinc corrugated roofs complement the weathered grey color of the barnwood siding, resulting in a home that harmonizes with its Hudson Valley setting.
The home is a touchstone for the owner couple and their extended family, so the design concept is a series of buildings attached by covered walkways and interstitial spaces.
This composition means the home can accommodate large family gatherings, but still retain an intimate feel.
Blackened steel shelving and a custom cooking hearth in the kitchen, along with a collection of custom-designed furniture and lighting throughout, complete the home’s interior environment.
