View of the Coastal Monolith great room with a bronze-clad fireplace anchoring a long limewash-plaster wall.

residential · Cocoa Beach, FL · 2025

Coastal Monolith

A 4,200-sq-ft single-family residence where the architecture and interior were composed as one continuous gesture — limewash plaster, weathered bronze, and a single, structural fireplace anchoring the great room.

The owners came with a single brief: "We want a house that disappears."

What they meant — we discovered through three months of conversation — was that they wanted a house that didn't perform. No grand entrance, no announced material moments, no rooms that demanded attention. They wanted the architecture to recede so the life inside it could come forward.

The result is a long, low gesture of limewash plaster set into a coastal hammock. The great room is anchored by a single bronze-clad fireplace that runs floor to ceiling — the only object in the space that is not white, plaster, or wood. Everything else is built-in, soft, and quiet.

Materials

The palette is small on purpose. Limewash plaster across every wall, ceiling included, hand-trowelled by the same artisan who finished a private chapel in Saint Augustine the year before. Quarter-sawn white oak floors, end-grain in the entry. A honed Vermont marble island, oversized and unfussy. And bronze — weathered, not polished — for everything that touches: door pulls, fireplace surround, fixtures.

Light

We treated daylight as the primary lighting plan. Electric light is supplemental. Linear, indirect, and warm, hidden in coves and edges so the source is never the subject. The reading nook in the back of the great room is lit by a single bronze sconce — and the sconce has no switch you can see.

Photography forthcoming. Project complete; archival images in development.

Materials

  • Limewash plaster
  • Weathered bronze
  • Quarter-sawn white oak
  • Honed Vermont marble
  • Bouclé linen

Continue

Ember Supperclub