
A stunning wood and glass Oregon home overlooking miles of forest and canyon? We’ll take it! See photos of the house—designed by architect James Cutler and styled by Peggi Jeung—that’s making us want to run away to Oregon.
Roger Davies/Interior Archive
The glass facades of the home’s three connecting pavilions reflect a pink-tinged dusk sky.
Roger Davies/Interior Archive
Taiga the Labrador admires his domain from the rug in the open-plan living room.
Peggi Jeung
The home’s kitchen sits at the end of the open-plan living room. You can also call it a living “pavilion,” if you feel like being fancy.
Roger Davies/Interior Archive
And check out that view! The house’s central pavilion overlooks a lush, green canyon.
Roger Davies/Interior Archive
Quick, is that wood or concrete on the walls of the hallway? Though the walls look paneled and have a wood pattern, it’s actually concrete molded to look like wood. The best of both worlds!
Roger Davies/Interior Archive
A cowboy hat is nearly required in this rugged home. This dining area is separated from the kitchen by a partition with built-in cupboards.

There’s a whole great world out there, filled with houses not nearly as awesome as this one. We figure that’s what the globe standing in the corridor outside the guest bedroom is meant to remind you.
Roger Davies/Interior Archive
Just a few easy steps from the kitchen (which sits at the other end of the open-plan living room) is a comfy seating area, complete with a wood-burning stove.

Bluestone patios lead from the bedrooms to the volcanic ash and rabbit brush on the desert floor outside.
Roger Davies/Interior Archive
A wooden vanity unit in the bathroom comes with a pair of basins surrounded by marble.
Roger Davies/Interior Archive
A glass door leads out into the desert brush. And this is only the guest bedroom!

The guest bedroom as seen from outside the floor-to-ceiling windows.
Roger Davies/Interior Archive
The master bedroom isn’t too shabby either, with its expansive views of Oregon’s high desert.

Floor-to-ceiling windows flood the entrance hall with light.

Open shelving along the length of the flared concrete wall in the dining area provides plenty of room for your knickknacks—and tree branches in a vase.

It’s a long way down from where the house is perched on the edge of a canyon, where the vertical wall drops into a basalt cascade.
Roger Davies/Interior Archive
Imagine waking up to this every morning. Early-morning light illuminates the desert brush and mist rising from the canyon below.





