Tobin Smith creates triangular Casa Escuda for San Antonio family

Exterior of a rocky-clad wall with an opening revealing a half-tubular orange tower

Texas studio Tobin Smith Architect has completed a home for an irregular site facing a nature preserve that was envisioned as a “series of shields” clad in limestone and stucco.

Designed for a family with teenage children, Casa Escuda is located in a neighbourhood in the heart of San Antonio in south-central Texas. The home is on a triangular, corner lot and looks toward a wooded preserve in the rear.

Exterior of a rocky-clad wall with an opening revealing a half-tubular orange tower
Limestone and stucco clad the exterior of the home

“The lot backs up to a nature preserve, giving the property a sense of seclusion despite its residential context,” said local studio Tobin Smith Architect.

The team’s goal was to create a home that could not only accommodate family life, but also serve as a peaceful refuge where occupants feel immersed in the landscape.

One-storey home with floor-to-ceiling windows separated by white walls
The house was designed to immerse residents in the landscape

Following the site’s geometry, the architects conceived a 6,169-square-foot (573-square-metre) home that is roughly triangular in plan. The dwelling consists of a single-storey main portion and a two-storey wing.

The exterior was envisioned as a “series of shields that provide privacy and mitigate solar exposure,” the team said.

Exterior of a rocky-clad wall with an opening revealing a half-tubular orange tower
A weathering steel structure channels water from the roof

The front facade offers maximum privacy. Pieces of Texas limestone – some smooth, others textured – are assembled in rows that form a long and mostly solid wall.

“Fenestrations are modulated by these datum lines, revealing a precise resolution of material, composition and interior experience,” the team said.

Marking the entrance is a tall, curved water feature made of weathering steel.

“Water from the roof cascades down this element and into a round cistern below, before flowing through a runnel at the base of the stone facade,” the team said.

“These oxidised elements celebrate water conveyance and distribute this captured resource to the landscape.”

Open -plan living and dining room with floor-to-ceiling windows
Rooms were oriented to face the nearby nature preserve

The home is more transparent in the rear. The single-level portion of the home has window walls set within a series of white stucco “fins”. The two-storey wing is covered in grey, burnished stucco.

Inside, one finds light-filled rooms, with views oriented toward the nature preserve.

Exterior of a home with floor-to-ceiling windows separated by white perpendicular walls
White fins separate glazed elevations

On the ground level, the team placed communal spaces, the main bedroom suite, guest quarters, a study, a garage and a carport. The upper level holds the kids’ bedrooms and a game room.

Interior finishes include porcelain tile flooring, walnut cabinetry and black soapstone.

Open-plan living space with white walls, porcelain floor tiles, a grey sofa and corner glazing opening to an outdoor patio
The interior was finished with porcelain floor tiles

A central patio, which adjoins the public realm, directs views to the “ephemeral foliage and skyscapes”.

Other homes in San Antonio include a home comprising gabled forms organized around three courtyards by Mary English and Xavier Vendrell Architects, and a small-footprint dwelling that is meant to show “how a family can comfortably live on a compact site without sacrificing space, quality or use.”

The photography is by Dror Baldinger.


Project credits:

Architect: Tobin Smith Architect
General contractor: Mauze Construction
Structural engineer: M. Scott Williamson
Landscape architect: John S Troy Landscape Architect

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