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    Elm, Hidden Creek, Neb.

    Randy Brown, FAIA, LEED AP, is opposed to the typical suburban production home, so he designed the Elm model of the Hidden Creek 12-unit project to fly in the face of convention.

     
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    House 99, Houston

    Architects Gail Peter Borden, RA, AIA, and Brian Delford Andrews, RA, covered all the bases—affordability, sustainability, and energy efficiencyÑin this prototype Houston house.

     
  • Big glass doors and an overhang of solar panels make up the guesthouse's front elevation.

    Mod Cott, Burnet, Texas

    The jury loved the way this Texas guesthouse and weekend retreat juxtaposes rough-edged elements and polished precision.

     
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    Community | City: Between Building and Landscape: Affordable, Sustainable Infill for Smoketown, Louisville, Ky.

    Marilys R. Nepomechie's proposal for revitalizing Smoketown, a historic African-American neighborhood in Louisville, Ky., won wide praise from our judges.

     
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    Formosa 1140, West Hollywood, Calif.

    With this West Hollywood, Calif., multifamily project, Lorcan O'Herlihy, FAIA, turns the concept of courtyard housing on its head—or, rather, on its side.

     
  • David Lake, FAIA likens the kitchen to a mess hall: "Several people can be in there cooking."

    LC Ranch, Three Forks, Mont.

    Lake|Flato Architects kept two regional precedents in mind when designing this Montana getaway.

     
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    Porchscapes, Fayetteville, Ark.

    Parks—not pipes. That was the rallying call behind Porchscapes, where a series of water treatment parks is the connective tissue for an entire low-income community.

     
 
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