Mourning Dovecote

Project Description

This 390 sq ft studio addition onto the owner/architect’s existing Sonoma home takes inspiration the site’s abundant pairs of Mourning Doves.  A traditional country ‘dovecote’ houses pigeons or doves, sometimes freestanding but often built into the ends of houses or barns. The architect researched the most advantageous height, orientation, proportion, and ventilation to encourage nesting doves –a process that informed both the shape of the exterior and interior space.

Here, although hidden from the interior, twelve nesting boxes are built into the angled exterior façade, encouraging the bird’s co-habitation of the space as in more traditional dovecote structures.  A lower bird-watching window focuses on the doves as they ground-feed and serves as convenient viewing spot for the owner’s two Spinone Italiano –Italian bird-dogs. A custom silk sheer panel divides the new space from the old with an image of a murmuration of swallows flocking.

This highly personal and customized project by the architect-owner became a site for exploration and play. We followed every intuition about details that might contribute to the space, hoping to stay just this side of ‘too-much.’ What unites the disparate details of this addition is a sense of movement, craft, and nature.

The pandemic, the passing of loved ones, and the realization that this house would become a forever home, all inspired the atmosphere and details of this 390 sq ft chapel-like dovecote/studio addition –that, and the comfort of hearing soft, drawn-out coos of Mourning Doves sounding like laments just outside.

Design Challenge

This 390 sq ft studio addition onto the owner/architect’s existing home in Sonoma, California takes inspiration from the site’s abundant pairs of Mourning Doves. The Mourning Dove, one of the most widespread of all North American birds suffering the impact of habitat loss, is typically monogamous yet is a prolific breeder, raising up to six broods a year. Both sexes take turn incubating –the male from morning to afternoon, and the female the rest of the day and night. Appreciating of these qualities, and the dove’s historical associations with peace and calm, made the idea of co-habitation with them a critical leitmotif –one made even more potent in a global pandemic. A traditional country ‘dovecote’ houses pigeons or doves, sometimes freestanding but often built into the ends of houses or barns. The architect researched the most advantageous height, orientation, proportion, and ventilation to encourage nesting doves –a process that informed both the shape of the exterior and interior space. The work also serves as a response to the proliferation of the ‘modern farmhouse’ style for new wine country homes –structures with the veneer of traditional farm buildings yet often out of scale with their surroundings, ill-sited, and ill-considered. This highly personal and customized project became a site for exploration and play. The owner/architect followed every intuition about details that might contribute to the bespoke space, hoping to stay just this side of ‘too-much.’ What unites the disparate details of this addition is a sense of movement, craft, nature, and serenity. Although hidden from the interior, twelve nesting boxes built into the angled exterior façade, encourage the bird’s co-habitation of the space as in traditional dovecote structures. A lower bird-watching window focuses on the doves as they ground-feed and serves as convenient viewing spot for the owner’s two Spinone Italiani bird-dogs. The ceiling is a series of slightly triangular planes in an off-white plaster that subtly captures the shifts in natural light. An aluminum art panel floats in front of an angled wall to intensify the depth of the abstract space. English Sycamore cabinetry with a slight translucent whitewash finish matches the plaster. A dark natural cork floor tile grounds the space.

Physical Context

Conceptually, the essence of the goals of sustainability are inscribed into the project even beyond basic code requirements.  The project’s program is the co-habitation of people with their natural environments –here, Mourning Doves.  More than just a naturalist’s interest in birdwatching, the nesting boxes –hidden from the inside– encourage the experience of their coos nearby sight unseen.  At its heart, the project assumes a balanced, equal, and respectful relationship with our natural environments. More conventionally, the project includes sustainable materials such as cork flooring, radiant heating and solar panels.  The roof ‘feathers’ are laser cut from sheet metal, careful nested to ensure minimal waste in fabrication.  Similarly, the offcuts from the cedar siding are used to create the laminated entry bridge to the dovecote studio space.