The window-wrapped mass of steel, oak, and glass laps up views of Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument.
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Project Details:
Location: Boulder, Utah
Designer: Locus Studios / @locus.studio
Footprint: 2,108 square feet
Structural Engineer: MJ Structural Engineers
From the Designer: "The Periphery is a two-bedroom home quietly embedded in Utah’s remote high desert, adjacent to the boundary of the 1.8-million-acre Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. Elevated above slickrock and wetlands at 6,300 feet, the house occupies a landscape defined by wind, water, and time. It is both refuge and instrument—designed to frame light, silence, and the subtle rhythms of the desert.
"Designed and built over four years by Locus Studio, The Periphery explores the threshold between habitation and exposure. Nestled among weathered juniper and pinyon, the home hovers lightly over the land, preserving the delicate desert ecology while anchoring itself firmly to the site’s geologic foundation. From its cantilevered concrete deck to the sculptural interplay of steel, oak, and glass, the project aims to dissolve the barrier between interior and exterior.
"The Periphery is the result of a design-build process executed by a small team of late-career collaborators who worked together from conceptual design through fabrication and construction. A 75-foot thermal mass wall mediates temperature swings; passive design strategies regulate comfort year-round; high-performance mechanical systems quietly optimize air quality and energy use—all while foregrounding the home’s real subject: light. Generous glass openings are paired with fully operable panels, creating an immersive connection to the desert’s changing conditions. The home is organized around axial views and framed moments.
"Oak, steel, and concrete form the project’s primary palette, each left intentionally expressive. Flush, full-height oak doors and casework, frameless clerestory windows, and custom-built-in furnishings lend a quiet rigor to the interiors. The steam room, clad in African mahogany, offers a singular contrast—a small moment of warmth and enclosure within the openness of the plan. The home’s small footprint is carefully calibrated to minimize site disturbance while allowing for outdoor living spaces, including a sheltered courtyard with a wood-fired hot tub, a natural swimming pond fed by a perennial creek, and a steel-framed workshop tucked into the landscape.
"Locus Studio managed much of the building process alongside a trusted group of craftspeople. This allowed the team to maintain an intimate relationship with the project’s evolution, from engineering and detailing to millwork and finish carpentry. The house is emblematic of the studio’s ethos—design driven not by fashion or spectacle, but by patient attention to site, climate, and the lived experience of those who will inhabit it."

Photo courtesy of Locus Studio

Photo courtesy of Locus Studio

Photo courtesy of Locus Studio
See the full story on Dwell.com: A Late-in-Life Home Designer Just Created a Bachelor’s Paradise—in Utah
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By: Grace Bernard
Title: A Late-in-Life Home Designer Just Created a Bachelor’s Paradise—in Utah
Sourced From: www.dwell.com/article/the-periphery-locus-studio-national-park-homes-259a33be
Published Date: Mon, 21 Jul 2025 16:55:56 GMT