Flowers’ new guest experience breathes new life into a cherished local landmark to become a destination resort-style estate dedicated to the celebration of wine, food, and the natural landscape. Located minutes from downtown Healdsburg, in the heart of Russian River Valley, and originally built as a winery in the mid-70s, the facilities on this 13.5 acre estate had deteriorated and become outdated.
Flowers Vineyard & Winery was looking for a venue to showcase their sustainably produced wines within a setting that expressed their nature-based ethos. Opportunity met serendipity to become a perfect union of context and intent, and a home for Flowers’ hospitality right. “Our approach was deceptively simple,” notes Brooks Walker, principal at Walker Warner Architects. “Let nature dominate and use architecture to frame the experience.”
Set within a redwood grove, the existing buildings were largely disconnected from their rich landscape. The strategy was to find ways to reconnect visitors to the landscape while reimagining what was a series of simple industrial buildings. This reinvigorated journey began by investing the site with a sense of orientation. New pathways lead visitors from the parking area to the updated visitor center. Previously a warehouse, the new hospitality house provides guests with an orientation to the site and introduces the Flowers’ story.
Remodeling the existing structures rather than building anew aligned with the Flowers’ commitment to sustainability. The approach, which enabled most of the original structure to be ‘recycled,’ gave focus to the design efforts, elevating what was already present. Passive energy strategies—low-cost, high-impact—were maximized and included taking advantage of daylight (skylight and large windows) and shade (exterior wood slats serve as a veil while the surrounding redwood grove offers additional shade).
Sustainability is reinforced through several large, monumental functional wood installations made of salvaged logs by artist Evan Shively. Tucked discretely into the landscape, the transformation involved adding a pop-up element at one end of the single-story hospitality house. The addition knits building with topography, resulting in a multi-level facility that preserves the modest vernacular forms while providing seamless access to the stunning views and gardens afforded by the hilltop.
The interiors are bright thanks to bleached cypress siding, completing the yin-yang (dark-light) relationship of outside to inside. Guests can experience a variety of intimate gatherings areas to savor Flowers’ Sonoma Coast wines both inside as well as outside. Upon entering, guests are led to the second floor which includes the sun room, the dining room and living areas as well as more private spaces for VIP guests.
“I first created inspirational boards that gave us (the architect, landscape and design team) a cohesive narrative for the design,” notes Maca Huneeus. “The idea was always to make people feel comfortable as if they were visiting a friend’s home in the countryside. Hence we made a library, a fireplace area, a terrace, a living room, etc. We kept the materials elemental to give it an authentic country vibe (wood, linens, wool, ceramics).”
The gardens, framed by existing refurbished rammed-earth walls, bring the experience into sharper focus, unfolding as a series of quiet eddies intended for gathering, tasting wine, and celebrating nature. The site occupies the boundary between the gridded vineyard and agricultural fields of the Russian River and is situated amongst the oak-grassland foothills leading up to the coastal redwood forests that surround Flowers’ estate vineyards on the extreme Sonoma Coast.
The terraced gardens feature plant communities indicative of each surrounding ecological typology. New board-formed concrete walls were added to the landscape as needed, serving as a counterpoint and augmenting the series of exposed archaeologies. Together, landscape and architecture combine to provide a quiet refuge, a place to celebrate community and friends through the experience of wine. Source by Walker Warner Architects.
- Location: Healdsburg, California, USA
- Architect: Walker Warner Architects
- Principal: Mike McCabe, Brooks Walker
- Project Manager: Sharon Okada
- Project Team: Matthew Marsten, Hana Bittner, Darcy Arioli
- Interiors: Maca Huneeus Design
- Landscape architecture: Nelson Byrd Woltz Landscape Architects
- Consulting local landscape architecture: Alexis Woods Landscape Design
- Lighting design: Anna Kondolf Lighting Design
- Structural engineering: Daedalus Structural Engineering
- Contractor: Cello & Madru Construction Company
- Reclaimed wood: Arborica
- Year: 2019
- Photographs: Douglas Friedman, Courtesy of Cameron Macallister Group
Photo © Douglas Friedman Photo © Douglas Friedman Photo © Douglas Friedman Photo © Douglas Friedman Photo © Douglas Friedman Photo © Douglas Friedman Photo © Douglas Friedman Photo © Douglas Friedman Photo © Douglas Friedman Photo © Douglas Friedman Photo © Douglas Friedman Photo © Douglas Friedman Photo © Douglas Friedman Photo © Douglas Friedman Photo © Douglas Friedman Photo © Douglas Friedman Photo © Douglas Friedman Ground Floor Plan First Floor Plan