Who says mountain homes must be dark and rustic? This Lake Dillon residence rewrites the script with whitewashed stain covering pine log work and cedar siding—a coastal sensibility transported to 9,000 feet with surprising success.
The outdoor spaces understand Colorado's secret: our evenings rival anywhere. A deck overlooks Lake Dillon's shimmering expanse while a generous covered porch provides all-weather gathering space. These aren't afterthought additions—they're primary living rooms for June through September, where lingering with family and friends becomes the default setting.
Inside, the signature move: a massive skylight that floods the interior with mountain light, illuminating oversized beams and custom logs in the kitchen ceiling and great room. The whitewashed palette that works outside carries through, creating brightness without sacrificing the structural drama that logs provide. It's an unexpected pairing—traditional mountain bones dressed in contemporary coastal finish—that somehow feels completely right.
This is Lake Dillon living reimagined—proof that mountain architecture doesn't require a single rulebook, that whitewashed can work as well as weathered, and that the best ideas sometimes come from borrowing boldly across styles and geographies.