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Photo By: Thomas McConnell.  The roof overhang of Soaring Wings, the home of a Texas couple who brought architect Winn Wittman in to help make it more eco-friendly.
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Feature: Taking Flight

Nancy A. Ruhling

March 1, 2008

Soaring wings, the hilltop house that takes its migrating moniker from the uplifting copper eaves, lords over the landscape like a bald eagle in its feathered nest.

What the winged wonder spies from its tri-level glass perch deep in the heart of West Lake Hills, a pebble’s throw from Austin in the verdant hill country of Texas, are the beauty of lake and forest and the comings and goings of the fox and the deer.

"The house, which has green features, was designed to have a dialog with nature," says architect Winn Wittman, whose Austin-based eponymous firm spent four years creating the home. "It brings nature into the lives of the owners, and is conducive to healthy living."

What Soaring Wings seductively whispered to nature caught the ears of Greg and Contessa McPike. So smitten were they with the idea of a naturalistic lifestyle that they traded their Houston apartment for it so they could raise their children, 11-year-old Aaron and 7-year-old Arianna, in what Contessa says is "not a house, but a work of art."

Her description takes no artistic license: Wittman, whose houses are influenced by the great modernist architects of the 20th century, sees his work as living sculptures, and Soaring Wings, a vision in copper and Texas shellstone, is his masterpiece.

From its filigree-like structure of red iron, whose intricate pieces are welded together to form a fine piece of jewelry, to its hand-seamed copper panels, the house is a feat of engineering and artful design. The first level—the smallest—houses a media room, wine cellar and garage. The second level contains the bedrooms, living room, dining room and kitchen. At the top level, a gallery with 40-foot floor-to-ceiling glass panels offers gorgeous views of the swimming pool and landscape. Two wings, reached via a two-story glass-and-steel bridge, separate the private and public spaces of the 6,100-square-foot home, which also features an elevator.

"I wanted to build an exceptional house, and this one represents the culmination of over 15 years of my work as an architect," says Wittman, adding that innovations by Austin-based builder Gary Robinson of Home As Art were instrumental to the project’s success. "I used light as a way to bring the outside in, and I incorporated green features, using materials like copper and steel that will last a lifetime and have high recycled content."

Energy-efficiency was an integral component in Soaring Wings’ design. Siting the home on the western exposure limits the sun’s impact, and the thick stone walls and curvaceous copper wings act as cool insulators in the heat of the day. The 146 windows are covered with V-Kool film, which blocks 99 percent of UV light and 70 percent of sunlight and heat, and are shaded with stainless steel–mesh panels and motorized Lutron QED shades that automatically raise and lower in sync with the sun via the Home Works System.

Inside, seven heating and cooling zones make maximum use of energy in all seasons. Cellulose insulation made from recycled newspapers and insulated panels give the walls a high R value. The sublime stair tower acts like a chimney by drawing in air at the bottom and passively exhausting it at the top. Rainwater collected in a cistern under the garage is used to water the landscape, which is filled with agave, bamboo, horsetail and other water-conserving plants. And the heated, black-granite Pebble Tec swimming pool is chlorine-free: It uses a saltwater and ozone purification system.

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