TAG Lake front
Just as construction of our Mystic Lake house was winding down, the neighbor’s house was demolished and construction began on their own new house; what goes around, comes around! And soon winter will have to arrive presumably; other than an odd snowfall around Halloween we’ve escaped so far. So, we will have to wait to do a full (professional) photo shoot until spring. In the meantime, our client shared the lovely photos below.
- The house settles into its lake-side site, a collage of discrete volumes stepping down to the steeply sloping lawn.
- The glassy living room volume seen from the lake.
- The house is built close to the street to maximize the size of the yard on the lake side; by spring we should start seeing the re-naturalized landscaping designed by Matthew Cunningham.
- With time, the front yard will grow up to screen much of the front of the house, merging house and landscape. You can see additional information on Matthew’s design in our August 30, 2011 blog post.
- The cantilevered living room volume hovers above the lake-side yard. We wanted to keep the footprint of the lower level as small as possible, hence the cantilevered volumes of the main living spaces; this also helps reduce and control the scale of the house on the lake side, which would otherwise have felt too massive.
- The glassy living room volume is on the left, and the home office and master bedroom roof deck are within the smaller volume on the right; between these is the main deck, with wide steps leading down to the yard and a lower terrace.
- The five foot wide steps lead down to a lower terrace with hot tub, and to granite steps set into the hill that lead down to the lake.
- The glassy living room cube hovers above Mystic Lake. From inside you really feel like you are floating on the lake.
Moving in to the (almost finished) Mystic Lake House
Ruhl Walker’s modern house on Mystic Lake is nearing completion and the owners have moved in, while meanwhile crews are still scrambling to finish the exterior. In fact, work is still on-going on the inside too, so living in the house is quite a challenge! But the movers had already been rescheduled twice, everything was packed, and the construction crews doubled down to make at least a partial move-in possible.
The interior stair railings were recently completed, after two separate steel fabricators’ equipment broke while trying to drill holes in the stainless steel posts for the cable rail system. The off-the-shelf railing system – by the Italian company Indital – was substantially less flexible and customizable than anticipated, but the installers went above and beyond to make everything work out smoothly in the end. Painters, tilers, carpenters, plasterers, plumbers, electricians, and landscape crews all competed for the same limited time and space. Everyone was trying their best to overcome the time lost to inclement weather over the brutal winter and wet spring.
One highlight of this last few weeks was the delivery of the dozens of slabs of granite, bought for next to nothing from the general contractor working on IKEA’s new store in Somerville; without our intrepid (and persistent) client, all of the granite curbs would have been dumped at a landfill, but are now beautifully choreographed per Matthew Cunningham’s brilliant landscape design. Saving money and being “green”…
So, with a month left before the babies are due, every day is still full of noise and commotion, but the end is in sight, and the magnificent views of the lake are at least a calming influence after the crews leave…

It was a long, snowy winter in New England, and new houses and their owners, contractors, and architects suffered more headaches than we have in many years. Hard to remember how lucky we’ve been in past winters while shoveling out feet of fresh new snow week after week… But despite the challenges, the house we designed on Mystic Lake in suburban Boston is now only a month away from completion, thanks to the efforts of the general contractor, Berkshire Wilton Partners and their team, as well as an enlightened client who also happens to be an architect. Budget challenges (opportunities!) never end, but the geothermal well is behind us, as is the unexpected shoring up of the site, most of the exterior roofing and siding, and all of the rough mechanical, electrical, and plumbing work, and related decisions. Interior trim (all set in flush with the walls) and plastering is mostly completed, tile is well along, and the stairs are going in this week. The owners are getting excited about the end of construction and the beginning of the joy of actually living lake-side; we’re sure they won’t miss the bi-weekly requisitions for payment this summer… Check back with us soon for updated photos once the dust settles inside!
Mystic Lake House Framing Complete

Ruhl Walker Architects was hired by a young couple — he a high tech consultant for a bio-tech company, she an MIT-trained corporate architect — to design a new house for a steeply sloping site along lower Mystic Lake in Arlington, MA. An existing house was slowly crumbling into its site, its concrete block foundation failing and its dimensions uninspiring, so demoliton was job number one in the project brief. Our clients asked for a reasonably sized house by today’s standards, with an above-ground lower level being unfinished but available for future use; a main level consisting of a large, open living / dining / cooking space, an entry hall with sculptural stair, a separate multi-purpose space to accomodate a sewing passion and home office, and a two car garage, with a courtyard deck in the center; and an upper level with 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, an exercise room, and a roof deck off of the master bedroom. The owners did not exactly see eye to eye on the look of the exterior, which was quite an adventure during early design meetings, but a reasonable solution made all parties happy in the end. The general conotractor is Berkshire Wilton Partners of Newton, MA and Wilton, CT. Landscape architecture will be by one of our favorite collaborators, Matthew Cunningham. Interiors will be by Ruhl Walker Architects.






































