Homes
Ghent House
Arched passageways, that act as tunnels, connect six single room volumes of Ghent House in the Catskill Mountains of upstate New York.
The dining room features wooden panels
The Ghent House, by Thomas Phifer and Partners, was designed as a linear collection of structures, slightly askew from one another and partially embedded into a hillside. Each structure contains one room. Slightly raised interconnecting underground passages link the rooms spatially and conceptually.
The building’s low profile minimizes its impact on the sprawling 78-acre site. A small, elevated entry building leads down and into the passage that connects the house’s four bedrooms, kitchen, living, and dining rooms.
Each room is focused on a large, glazed opening that provides spectacular views of the Catskill Mountains and access to the exterior. The site design accommodates sculpture, sitting areas, a pool, walking paths, beehives, and provides ample grazing land for local cattle farmers.
Photography by Stephen Kent Johnson; Styling by Michael Reynolds
Ghent House features volumes set into the hillside
Thomas Phifer and Partners added arched passageways to the interior