Collector’s Rambler
Some of the best spaces happen slowly. What began as a simple request to expand a rambler for a growing family evolved over the years into a complete transformation that honors the owner’s passion for vintage collecting and the home’s forested surroundings. Set among towering fir trees, our design carefully extends the original house into the landscape, allowing the architecture to hunker low beneath the forest canopy. While a palimpsest of the original tract house remains, the focus is more on maintaining the site’s defining feature—the quiet character of the wooded acreage.
The DNA of the original rambler remains legible, but the expanded form reframes its relationship to the site. Rather than erasing the ranch house or deferring to it, the addition establishes a thoughtful dialogue between old and new. Large windows and vaulted ceilings open the home to the surrounding greenery, creating a continuous visual and spatial connection to the forest beyond.
This low, hovering shelter provides a protective space for our client’s deeply personal approach to interiors. An avid collector and estate-sale enthusiast, she filled the home with richly layered furnishings, textures, and artifacts that bring warmth and narrative depth to the architecture. The result is a refreshing departure from the minimalism architectural practice often promotes—more akin to the lived-in richness of the Eames House than to a curated showroom selling Eames products.
This collaboration ultimately became reciprocal: while the architecture provides a calm, grounded framework within the trees, the client’s collections animate the spaces with history and meaning. The project stands as a quiet lesson in restraint, adaptation, and the power of designing homes that continue to evolve through the lives of their occupants.
Scope:
Addition to an existing house.



Architect:
Paul Michael Davis, Veronica Leanos, Cory Ackerman, Bao Vo
Completion:
2023
Area:
3900 SF
Location:
Redmond, WA, USA
Structural:
Karl Rosman, Swenson Say Faget
Civil:
Ron Frederiksen, Eastside Consultants LLC
Contractor:
Andy Puckett, Puckett Homes
Photography:
Mark Woods

