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Mountain Modern Glass and Copper House

  • Writer: Angela Knight
    Angela Knight
  • Sep 8
  • 2 min read

Perched high in the wooded ridges near Hedgesville, West Virginia, stands a house that looks less like a traditional Appalachian dwelling and more like a dream pulled from the forest itself. Known simply as the Mountain Modern Glass and Copper Home, it is a structure that blurs the line between architecture and landscape, a contemporary retreat designed to both stand out and disappear among the trees.


The home was created by visionary architect Travis Price, whose designs often merge bold modern forms with the raw beauty of nature. From a distance, the house appears as though it has grown organically from the hillside. Its copper cladding, warm and reflective, shifts color with the seasons—gleaming in the summer sun, burnished in autumn, and muted under winter snow. Walls of floor-to-ceiling glass dissolve the boundary between inside and out, offering panoramic views of the dense forest canopy and the rolling Blue Ridge Mountains beyond.


Inside, the house feels at once intimate and expansive. The open floor plan emphasizes flow: a living area anchored by a minimalist fireplace, a kitchen with clean lines and natural finishes, and lofted ceilings that invite light and air to dance across the rooms. The use of natural wood and stone grounds the modern design in a sense of place, while the glass walls invite the forest to become part of daily life—each sunrise, each shifting cloud, each rustle of leaves is part of the architecture.


Perhaps the most striking feature is the way the house perches on its site, elevated almost like a grown-up treehouse. Balconies and outdoor decks extend into the woods, perfect for morning coffee among birdsong or stargazing under the vast Appalachian night sky. It is a home built for immersion, where one never quite feels indoors or outdoors, but in some liminal space between.


Though strikingly modern, the Mountain Modern Home is not isolated from its surroundings. It represents a new vision of Appalachian living—respectful of the landscape but unafraid to reimagine what a mountain home can be. Instead of heavy log beams or rustic stonework, it embraces transparency, lightness, and a daring conversation between human design and natural wonder.


Still privately owned, the home remains a living retreat, not a museum. Its glass walls and copper skin echo with footsteps, laughter, quiet reflection—the rhythms of daily life set against the timeless backdrop of West Virginia’s mountains. For those lucky enough to step inside, it feels less like visiting a house and more like entering into a dialogue with the forest itself.




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