Young Projects’ Cut Out House Proves Subtraction Is the Most Powerful Tool in Architecture

Most mountain houses try too hard. Cut Out House, designed by New York-based studio Young Projects, does the opposite — it sits in the foothills of the Canadian Rocky Mountains, tucked into a low-density development where the land does most of the talking.

The project was conceived as a family vacation home, and it wears that intention openly. Rather than asserting itself against the landscape, the house responds to it — balancing intimate spaces oriented toward the dense surrounding woodland with communal areas that open dramatically toward the mountains. That duality is the architecture. Everything else follows from it.

Designer: Young Projects

Young Projects’ Cut Out House Proves Subtraction Is the Most Powerful Tool in Architecture

Young Projects’ Cut Out House Proves Subtraction Is the Most Powerful Tool in Architecture

The defining move is the butterfly roof, which Young Projects uses not just as a formal gesture but as a tool for orchestrating experience. The angled planes slope in opposite directions, directing views outward from within while reflecting the terrain’s gradient from outside. Where the roofline climbs, communal living spaces claim the panoramic views. Where tree density compresses the sightlines, private bedrooms pull back into quieter, more sheltered corners of the plan. The roof, in a sense, is the planner.

The “cut out” in the name refers to a series of subtractions carved from the building’s overall volume — openings and recesses that give the house its sculptural character without overworking it. This is a form shaped as much by removal as by addition. The result reads as something confidently simple, which is the harder thing to achieve. Most houses at altitude either defer too much to the landscape or compete with it. Cut Out House does neither.

Young Projects’ Cut Out House Proves Subtraction Is the Most Powerful Tool in Architecture

Young Projects’ Cut Out House Proves Subtraction Is the Most Powerful Tool in Architecture

Gray Accoya wood clads the exterior, a material choice that ages gracefully and lends the structure a tonal continuity with the rock and timber of the surrounding terrain. It doesn’t announce itself. From across a nearby body of water, the butterfly roofline is the first thing you read — a dynamic silhouette that shifts with the light and suggests movement even when the house is still.

Bryan Young founded Young Projects in New York in 2010, and the studio has built a reputation for work that thinks carefully about the relationship between built form and context. Cut Out House extends that sensibility into alpine territory, where the stakes of getting that relationship wrong are immediately visible in every window. The house doesn’t compete with the Rockies. It leans into them, shapes itself around them, and in doing so becomes something more interesting than a retreat — it becomes a calibrated act of looking.

Young Projects’ Cut Out House Proves Subtraction Is the Most Powerful Tool in Architecture

Young Projects’ Cut Out House Proves Subtraction Is the Most Powerful Tool in Architecture

Young Projects’ Cut Out House Proves Subtraction Is the Most Powerful Tool in Architecture

Young Projects’ Cut Out House Proves Subtraction Is the Most Powerful Tool in Architecture

The post Young Projects’ Cut Out House Proves Subtraction Is the Most Powerful Tool in Architecture first appeared on Yanko Design.

©

Related Posts

my favorite phaidon cookbooks / sfgirlbybaymy favorite phaidon cookbooks / sfgirlbybay
cookbook collector.
truth be told, i am a bit of a cookbook...
Read more
Edition Office Inteview Feature YellowtraceEdition Office Inteview Feature Yellowtrace
Interview: Aaron Roberts & Kim Bridgland of...
  Aaron Roberts and Kim Bridgland forged a shared perspective on...
Read more
Young Projects’ Cut Out House Proves Subtraction Is the Most Powerful Tool in ArchitectureYoung Projects’ Cut Out House Proves Subtraction Is the Most Powerful Tool in Architecture
When Abandoned Spaces Get a Second Life...
Portuguese artist Odeith has turned forgotten corners of the urban...
Read more
Young Projects’ Cut Out House Proves Subtraction Is the Most Powerful Tool in ArchitectureYoung Projects’ Cut Out House Proves Subtraction Is the Most Powerful Tool in Architecture
India Mahdavi and Daniel Emma soak the...
NGV is currently running two major programmes which confirm the...
Read more
In deze stoere moderne betonstuc badkamer is er gekozen voor elegante verzonken inbouwspots. Klik hier voor meer fotoIn deze stoere moderne betonstuc badkamer is er gekozen voor elegante verzonken inbouwspots. Klik hier voor meer foto
Inbouwspots in de badkamer
Wil jij graag inbouwspots in de badkamer (laten) plaatsen? Nice!...
Read more
Young Projects’ Cut Out House Proves Subtraction Is the Most Powerful Tool in ArchitectureYoung Projects’ Cut Out House Proves Subtraction Is the Most Powerful Tool in Architecture
Healthcare FSA Warning: Average Lost Contribution was...
It’s mid-December. Do you know where your Healthcare Flexible...
Read more