The Nancekivell home in North Oaks has gotten more press than your average suburban house.
It's been featured on the cover of Fine Homebuilding magazine, and showcased in a coffee-table book about residential architecture. It also appeared on the cover of the Star Tribune's Homes section in 2003 as a "Home of the Month" winner, a new awards program launched that year in partnership with the local chapter of the American Institute of Architects.
"That's one of my favorite houses," said architect Michaela Mahady of SALA, who designed the house for the Nancekivells and included it in her 2010 book, "Welcoming Homes: Creating a House that Says Hello."
"The long entry path really draws you into the home," Mahady said. There's a sloping walkway that guides visitors toward a pergola-covered courtyard and a glassy, slate-floored front entry. "It's a very engaging experience. You're almost entering the home even when you're outside. You feel you know the house already."
Curved lines on the exterior, including an eyebrow window above the pergola, add to the welcoming effect, she added. "It gives that gable a certain cachet, an inviting character."
'Into the topography'
Mahady's design for the home was inspired by its site, a heavily wooded hill. "It's a walkout site, essentially," she said. But after walking the hillside to understand its contours and views, she was inspired to design something less traditional, more whimsical than a typical walkout house wedged into the side of a hill.
Instead, she came up with a multilevel house that follows the slope of the hill, designed to replicate what it feels like to walk up and down the hillside.
"It's the kind of house that's really integrated into the topography," said Jim Nancekivell.