Designing a hangar house
/And here we have it. A big, beautiful, 2.5-acre blank canvas upon which to create the perfect dream home. It’s a bit daunting. So, we started where every great home design begins: Pinterest.
The home first started to take shape in our heads, through internet searches, and by driving around the valley looking for homes that inspired us. We were all over the place and feeling overwhelmed. But generally, we knew we wanted 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, a mud room to put skis, boots, and gear for adventure, an oversized garage for bike storage, and ultimately, a home that somehow captured the expansive views of the mountains and airstrip activity. We also knew we wanted something modern, yet still timeless. My sister suggested we start googling “Scandinavian Farmhouse” …and also to get in touch with Rob.
Fortunately, my Dad’s cousin (Rob Ludden) is a retired and very talented architect. After one phone call, he took an immediate interest in our project and began to help me shape the vision for this house and hangar. From this point forward, Rob would become indispensable.
The first pass at a design, mainly due to my desire to sleep with my plane, was to build a hangar home – a glorified shop which housed planes on the ground level and had living quarters above. We throught we could build the hangar house first and then perhaps a 1 bedroom A-frame down the road as a guest house.
After 2 months of toying with this idea, we came to the conclusion that it wasn’t cost effective, practical, and ultimately would force too many compromises to create the home that we were really dreaming of. So, it was back to the drawing board…
The second time around, armed with the knowledge that we wanted to separate the house and hangar (much to Sydney’s happiness), we decided to focus on building a house that was timeless, unique, bright (we’ve got some dark winters up here), and open. And it needed to have a sense of place. To be unique, but still feel like it belonged in Montana. We decided to nix the shed roof style originally planned in the hangar home concept for fear of it being too trendy. The goal now was to create a single-story home, for a lot of reasons, but mainly because a ranch-style house felt like something that honored the retired farmland upon which it sat.