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Midnight Blue: Architecture as a Sensory Exploration

Located in Paradise Valley, Arizona, the residence combines light, color, and materiality in a redefined domestic experience

Blank Studio Design + Architecture

Midnight Blue by Blank Studio Design + Architecture in Paradise Valley, Arizona
By Editorial Staff -
Duravit, Gaggenau have participated in the project

Set in the desert landscape of Paradise Valley, Arizona, Midnight Blue is a single-family residence that explores the intersection of form, perception, and domestic space.

A cornerstone of this project by Blank Studio Design + Architecture is a cohesive and sophisticated exploration of light, color, and materiality, articulated through a series of resonances and contrasts between the exterior and interior.

 

Midnight Blue: Dynamic formal complexity

Midnight Blue - Blank Studio Design + Architecture © Bryan Arellano | Zumstudio, courtesy Blank Studio Design + Architecture


The project takes its name from the glazed terracotta panels that clad the exterior. A highly glossy deep blue, the panels feature a fine crystalline craze cracking pattern – an elegant effect typically found in premium pottery.

Midnight Blue - Blank Studio Design + Architecture © Bryan Arellano | Zumstudio, courtesy Blank Studio Design + Architecture


The ventilated facade uses two types of tile – smooth and ribbed – arranged according to a clear compositional logic. A waterline datum at 2.7 m separates the smooth lower panels from the ribbed panels above. Extending outward from this datum, the panels are staggered from large to small, creating a distinctive visual rhythm.

Light plays a key role here, with the glossy surfaces reflecting the surrounding landscape, thereby anchoring the architecture in its context and heightening the dynamic perception of the facade.

Midnight Blue - Blank Studio Design + Architecture © Bryan Arellano | Zumstudio, courtesy Blank Studio Design + Architecture


The building’s four volumes are arranged at varying heights, stepping downward from the primary living area. The L-shaped configuration organizes the building by separating the private areas around the perimeter from the communal spaces at the core.

 

Relationships between inside and out

Midnight Blue - Blank Studio Design + Architecture © Bryan Arellano | Zumstudio, courtesy Blank Studio Design + Architecture


Through a series of contrasts and continuities, the interior establishes a direct relationship with the building envelope. The facade’s horizontal datum extends inside, with the surfaces above the line transitioning to a dove grey, while the surfaces below it feature nuanced whites.

Midnight Blue - Blank Studio Design + Architecture © Bryan Arellano | Zumstudio, courtesy Blank Studio Design + Architecture


The color scheme is informed by the writings of Japanese designer Kenya Hara, who describes white as pure potential – not an absence of color, but a state of receptivity. Subtle hues of lavender, buttercream, pale blue, and green differentiate the rooms according to their function, reinforced by the quality of natural light entering each volume. The result is appearances that change throughout the day, with light serving as a key tool in articulating space.

Midnight Blue - Blank Studio Design + Architecture © Bryan Arellano | Zumstudio, courtesy Blank Studio Design + Architecture


This spatial experience is reinforced by organic ceiling voids integrated with skylights and clerestories. Concealed from the exterior, these apertures have different orientations, thereby modulating the intensity and color of natural light to create a constantly changing experience.

Midnight Blue - Blank Studio Design + Architecture © Bryan Arellano | Zumstudio, courtesy Blank Studio Design + Architecture


Materials such as rift-cut white oak and exposed concrete balance the composition, introducing a warm, tactile dimension.

Midnight Blue translates a design vision centered on perception into an architectural form in which light, chromatic variation, and materiality define the spatial experience.

>>> Discover also London Solar House: High-Density Living Within a Compact Footprint

Midnight Blue - Blank Studio Design + Architecture © Bryan Arellano | Zumstudio, courtesy Blank Studio Design + Architecture

Midnight Blue - Blank Studio Design + Architecture © Bryan Arellano | Zumstudio, courtesy Blank Studio Design + Architecture

Midnight Blue - Blank Studio Design + Architecture © Bryan Arellano | Zumstudio, courtesy Blank Studio Design + Architecture

Midnight Blue - Blank Studio Design + Architecture © Bryan Arellano | Zumstudio, courtesy Blank Studio Design + Architecture

Midnight Blue - Blank Studio Design + Architecture © Bryan Arellano | Zumstudio, courtesy Blank Studio Design + Architecture

Midnight Blue - Blank Studio Design + Architecture © Bryan Arellano | Zumstudio, courtesy Blank Studio Design + Architecture

Midnight Blue - Blank Studio Design + Architecture © Bryan Arellano | Zumstudio, courtesy Blank Studio Design + Architecture

Midnight Blue - Blank Studio Design + Architecture © Bryan Arellano | Zumstudio, courtesy Blank Studio Design + Architecture

Midnight Blue - Blank Studio Design + Architecture © Bryan Arellano | Zumstudio, courtesy Blank Studio Design + Architecture

Midnight Blue - Blank Studio Design + Architecture © Bryan Arellano | Zumstudio, courtesy Blank Studio Design + Architecture

Midnight Blue - Blank Studio Design + Architecture © Bryan Arellano | Zumstudio, courtesy Blank Studio Design + Architecture

Midnight Blue - Blank Studio Design + Architecture © Bryan Arellano | Zumstudio, courtesy Blank Studio Design + Architecture

Credits

Location: Paradise Valley, Arizona, USA
Completion: 2025
Gross Floor Area: 546 m²
Architect: Blank Studio Design + Architecture
Design Team: Matthew G Trzebiatowski, Samuel Martin, Garth Lindquist, Aimee Butron, Win Mon
Rendering: Haze Visuals
General Contractor: Radius Contractors

Consultants
Structural: BDS
MEP: Gardel Engineering
Civil: JE Fuller
Landscape inventory: Native Resources International, 

Suppliers
Bathroom Tub: Duravit
Kitchen Appliances: Gaggenau 

Photography: Bryan Arellano, Zumstudio, courtesy of Blank Studio Design + Architecture

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