It's hard to pick one feature that encapsulates the most arresting design elements of Prairie Prospect, the eye-catching house built near Stillwater during the pandemic for a young immigrant couple who were newlyweds.
Is it the airy kitchen that has no pantry but is so large and open that it can be its own family party room, albeit with aromatic swirling spices thrilling the senses to a soundtrack of stovetop sizzling instead of fog sliced by laser lights and punctuated by throbbing beats?
Or is it the ginormous 21-foot-long, five-panel sliding door off the kitchen that blurs the border between indoors and out, giving a sense of living, nay, floating in nature?
How about the way the light permeates the house from sunup to sundown so that the owners do not have to turn a switch to illuminate their prairie-set dream?
The structure, imagined and brought to life by husband-wife team Jeremy and Sara Imhoff — he's the architect of record, she the designer — has drawn a raft of accolades, including winning a Home of the Month award, presented by the American Institute of Architects — Minnesota and the Star Tribune.
"There's a streamlined simplicity to what we're doing — a carefully crafted quality so that even though the house might appear to be simple, we're thinking about light and volume and space," Sara said. "Our designs are much more than the floor plans and the massing."
Married for 21 years and the owners of Imprint Architecture and Design, the Imhoffs refined their process and aesthetic at home before going into business. The couple, who met as undergraduates at the University of Minnesota, lived in Washington state, where Jeremy went to graduate school.
It was there that they spent eight or nine years — he said eight, she said nine — renovating a house. Their marriage survived.