explore four decades of work by olson kundig co-founder

 

Seattle-based architect Tom Kundig has long approached the house as a field for experimentation — a typology that allows for direct engagement with materials and with the landscape. His forthcoming book, Tom Kundig: Complete Houses, published by Monacelli, consolidates this lifelong investigation into a single, definitive volume.

 

Documenting 462 projects across nearly forty years, the 600-page publication captures the evolution of Kundig’s oeuvre through an extensive visual and textual record. While the book spans an international range of sites — from the forested archipelagos of the Pacific Northwest to arid deserts in Mexico and volcanic terrain in Hawaii — it is tied together by the architect’s consistent exploration of the essential elements of design: space, light, material, and view.

tom kundig complete houses
Tom Kundig: Complete Houses, book cover | image courtesy Monacelli

 

 

A Comprehensive Record of Domestic Architecture

 

Among the architect‘s total body of work, Tom Kundig: Complete Houses highlights a selection of thirty-eight residences for more in-depth analysis. Twelve of these are newly completed and published here for the first time. Each is accompanied by photography, hand-drawn sketches, and interviews between Kundig and editor Dung Ngo that trace his influences, from his Swiss heritage to his architectural training at the University of Washington. The conversations reveal a practice characterized by curiosity and risk-taking, — qualities that have defined his career at Olson Kundig, the Seattle firm he co-leads together with architect Jim Olson.

 

Kundig’s residential work is marked by a fascination with movement and adaptability. Many of his projects incorporate mechanical systems — large pivoting windows, sliding walls, and operable facades — that merge the boundary between enclosure and environment. Moreover, the book points to the architect’s sensitivity to craft and the tactile presence of structure.

tom kundig complete houses
Delta Shelter, Mazama, Washington, 2005 | image © Tim Bies / Olson Kundig

 

 

‘tom kundig: complete houses,’ the most comprehensive yet

 

This Complete Houses publication marks Tom Kundig’s fifth monograph and stands as the most comprehensive to date. It offers a chronological overview of his residential practice — past, present, and future — and reveals the threads that connect decades of work. Each project, no matter how remote or refined, reflects a consistent inquiry into how architecture mediates between people and place.

 

Bound in vibrant cloth with an embossed sketch on the cover and encased in a slipcase featuring project photography, the monograph mirrors the material integrity of Kundig’s built work. The volume’s design makes reading a tactile experience.

 

For Kundig, the house is a laboratory as well as a refuge. It is a place where his design ideas are tested and refined before being translated into larger civic and cultural projects. ‘Each home is a chance to test an idea, refine a detail, or take a risk,’ he reflects. ‘This book is a moment of reflection in my practice, an attempt to capture something that is always in motion.’

tom kundig complete houses
Maxon House and Studio, Carnation, Washington, 2023 | image © Aaron Leitz

tom kundig complete houses
Outpost, Bellevue, Idaho, 2008 | image © Tim Bies

tom kundig complete houses
The Pierre, San Juan Islands, Washington, 2010 | image © Dwight Eschliman