MAYURA MANOR
Deadlines and Design Codes Don’t Stop A Dream Home. A striking front elevation is met with highly-efficient sustainable features and includes a courtyard connecting the main home, casita and garage, with custom stone water features elevated above the pool deck.
REYES PARADE OF HOMES RESIDENCE
In order to maximize the available project footprint and achieve the beautiful mediterranean-inspired look, the design required complex, tight-radius corners and openings.
DICEMAN MODERN FARMHOUSE
The challenge for this build was to create a home that would appeal to a sophisticated buyer with features that an empty nester moving from a larger more expansive home would enjoy. The result is an energy efficient home which creatively uses space in an attractive, luxurious, and cost effective way.
HAZELDEAN RETIREMENT HOME
The owners wanted an energy-efficient facility where they could provide independent living, palliative, and end-of-life care in Ontario, Canada.
HURRICANE HARVEY REBUILD
The owners’ former home, destroyed by Hurricane Harvey, was the touchstone for family gatherings for nearly two decades, and its loss was devastating for the family.
WALLHOUSE HOTEL
Wallhouse Hotel brings a contemporary design to a quite region of Ohio.
SANTA RITA RANCH ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
Discovery is one of the four schools to receive the zero energy certification, nationwide.
SHOP BUILDING AND GARAGE
The project was built to create a sound and visual barrier between the neighboring home after a section of trees on the side yard that joined the two properties was cleared.
White Paper: Effects of the Thermal Envelope on Home Energy Efficiency
In this white paper, Fox Blocks explore the science behind creating a good thermal envelope with insulated concrete forms.
MHA INTERPRETIVE CENTER
Net-Zero Museum Exemplifies The Sustainable Resilience of the MHA Nation. The MHA Interpretive Center is an educational museum and nature center owned and governed by the Mandan Hidatsa Arikara Nation. Housing some of the most sacred objects and artifacts of the MHA Nation, the structure includes a large, 80-foot radius wall with an observation deck overlooking Lake Sakakawea, which was built to align with the Nation’s values and embrace sustainability and respect to the earth.