Architecture

Shou Sugi Ban

Whether you call it Shou Sugi Ban or Yakisugo, fire-treated wood is making an appearance in rustic structures and furniture throughout the country.

Shou Sugi Ban seems to be turning up everywhere lately. Ever since I wrote about a table that appears on the cover of Rustic Modern, in the lakeside home of Montana Architect Larry Pearson, I’ve been noticing it — most recently in a Chairish blog just yesterday.

According to William Beleck, who dug into the research on behalf of Nakamoto Forestry, the practice has been mistakenly called Shou Sugi Ban in Europe and the U.S. — rather than the more correct Yakisugo — due to a linguistic fine point, the mistake resulting from differences between the Chinese and Japanese languages. Yet even Japanese firms are still promoting the wood as Shou Sugi Ban, so the jury seems to be out.

Whatever the correct term, it’s a method of wood preservation whose byproduct is beauty and serenity, as seen in many an ancient Japanese temple. In a recent story I did for Big Sky Journal, I loved everything about the home and guest house on the banks of the Wood River in Idaho. But I especially loved the builder's backstory:

"Years ago, Idaho-based builder Mat Hall read about the ancient Japanese wood-preserving technique called Shou Sugi Ban. The treatment involves charring wood to promote resistance to fire, degradation, and pests, and it results in a beautiful dark tone with unusual texture and depth. At the time, he was intrigued enough to post a photo on Facebook with the caption: “Any takers?” It never occurred to him that years later, he would be asked to construct an entire home and guesthouse using the process."

For this project, Hall created his own fire-charring setup on site, flaming wood by hand in all weathers and temperatures. After building the guest house, though, he decided there had to be a better way. For the main house he sourced the exterior wood from a well regarded purveyor specializing in the technique.

The architecture is by Janet Jarvis of The Jarvis Group, the interiors by the late Toni Breck, a talented designer who was a close friend and neighbor of the homeowners. Photography by Heidi Long. Nomenclature to be determined!

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Iconic Big Sur

The dramatic stretch of Highway 1 sandwiched between the Santa Lucia Mountains and the Pacific Ocean and running from Carmel to San Simeon is one of the most iconic and immediately recognizable landscapes in the world.  Sea lions, surfers, hairpin curves, California condors, beaches and one very beautiful bridge define a 65-mile stretch of highway known as Big Sur.

Summer is high season for adventurers driving from LA to Seattle, for day trippers heading to a surf break and a meal at the clifftop Nepenthe Restaurant, for sybarites anticipating a luxurious stay at Post Ranch Inn or Ventana, or for campers persistent enough to have snagged a coveted reservation at Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park. The timing was terrible, then, when in February a series of winter storms damaged the photogenic Pfeiffer Canyon Bridge, forcing the closure of 35 miles of highway. All hopes for some semblance of a summer season for Big Sur businesses were completely dashed when in May a massive landslide buried a quarter mile of Highway 1. Sections of the road may be closed for a year.

Ironically, if you can figure out how to get there (such as flying in by helicopter or navigating footpaths around the problem areas, where you can then catch a shuttle ride), this can be a good time to discover what drew Jack Kerouac, Henry Miller, the Beat poets and midcentury celebrities shunning the limelight to Big Sur. Without the ceaseless traffic on Highway 1, it’s all about the ocean, the views, the wildlife, the night stars. When you go, look for Wild Bird, the iconic A-frame house that Architect Nathanial Owings of Skidmore Owings and Merrill built for his bride and which was recently renovated.

If you can’t get there, or want to wait until the road is open, read the full story on Owings' romantic proposal and Wild Bird's stunning renovation in Rustic Modern, pub. date August 8th, and available for preorder now.