Skip to content

The Art in This Leschi Yard is Literally Immersive

One local collector’s transformed front yard features a new swimming pool with a custom installation

By Rachel Gallaher July 18, 2024

The Leschi backyard features a rectangular pool with people swimming and lounging on inflatables, surrounded by greenery. Others sit on the grass and by the patio, enjoying the sunny day, creating an immersive experience for everyone.
Best Practice Architecture transformed this previously unused front yard into a summertime oasis with multiple seating options. The pool’s custom tile installation is by the late Jim Melchert and his grandson Galen Melchert.
Photo by Rafael Soldi

When architect Ian Butcher signed on to design an outdoor space for a local philanthropist and art collector, it turned out to be a double dose of revisiting the past. 

Butcher, the founder of Best Practice Architecture, had worked on a handful of projects for the client and his family — including a custom residence and the Western Bridge art gallery — and, as it would turn out, he had been involved in the design and construction of the home where the client currently lived and wanted to install a pool.

Located in Leschi, the house is a project by local architect E. Cobb Architects.

“Before I started my practice I was working in his office and I was part of the team that designed this house, so I was very familiar with it,” Butcher says. Over the years, Butcher and the client (who moved into the residence before the pandemic) had remained in touch, so when the latter asked about the possibility of building a pool in his yard and then offered the job to Butcher, the architect was all in. But this wouldn’t be an everyday pool addition. The client, an avid swimmer and art enthusiast, wanted to commission custom pieces to integrate into the new yardscape. 

“Art has been a big deal for me for as long as I can remember,” says the client, who asked to remain anonymous. “Ian and I have worked on a couple of things that involved a deep commitment to showing art — and this project did not disappoint.”

While most homeowners would site a pool in their backyard, the property’s layout — and the privacy provided by its setback and strategically placed laurel hedges — made a front-of-the-house positioning preferable. “The front yard was pretty big and flat,” Butcher recalls. “Previously, a stepped green lawn with a series of pavers led to a patio. (The client) had a hot tub that he’d go in every day, but he wanted to be able to swim laps.”

Measuring 11 feet-by-28 feet, the new rectangular pool faces west, with an adjacent grassy lawn providing space for the client’s grandkids to run around or friends to come over and lounge in the sun. Best Practice lowered the elevation to match the house and its patio, creating a long concrete bench at the pool’s edge. A second, smaller bench tucks into the southwest corner of the yard, and a new glass door between the kitchen and patio better connects the house with the landscape, and offers views of Lake Washington from the pool area.

“The client really loved his house, and he didn’t want to make some new statement with the pool,” says Butcher, noting that they kept a minimal material palette that includes durable Ipe wood decking and concrete. “It had to be complementary with the house.”

The architects, who worked with Dolan Construction, PoolPro, and John Hoedemaker, retained a simple palette and motif of recurring geometric shapes.
Photo by Rafael Soldi

Four commissioned artworks dot the yard — and one is in the pool. Titled Liquid Center, the custom tile installation is by the late Jim Melchert and his grandson Galen Melchert. Lining the bottom and one end of the pool, the piece mimics the illusion of the wavering swim lines one sees when standing above the water.

“Every time I open the pool, I can only smile at this simple but perfect design,” the client adds.

While Melchert unfortunately passed away last year, his grandson Galen, also an artist, was able to finish the project. Additional work includes a playful, animalistic fountain by local artist Jeffrey Mitchell; Mungo Thomsen’s cheeky painted-bronze delivery-box tower sculpture, part of the artist’s Snowman series; and a lighting installation by Spencer Finch.

What appears to be a forgotten delivery on the pool deck is actually a painted bronze sculpture by Mungo Thomsen.
Photo by Rafael Soldi
A lush backyard with tall bamboo plants and a wooden walkway leading to a small pool, featuring immersive art with a sculpture on a pedestal surrounded by greenery. This Leschi backyard offers an enchanting blend of nature and creativity.
A cast-bronze fountain by local artist Jeffrey Mitchell stands guard at one end of the patio.
Photo by Rafael Soldi

Now that summer’s here, the client finds that his formerly unused front yard is a favorite hangout. “(It’s) became the center for family and friends, and, lucky me, art,” the client says. “Everyone who can remember the original yard cannot believe the transformation. The grassy area now available for corn hole and seating seems bigger than the yard that was there. The pool is perfectly sized for hanging out and grandkid fun.”

Follow Us

Go See Diné Artist Eric-Paul Riege’s Largest Show to Date at the Henry Art Gallery

Go See Diné Artist Eric-Paul Riege’s Largest Show to Date at the Henry Art Gallery

With a mix of mediums, ojo|-|ólǫ́ examines questions surrounding the authenticity and ownership of Indigenous work.

It’s a phrase that’s been drilled into most of us since we were young children: When you’re visiting a gallery, please, do not touch the art. In many cases, it’s with good reason: the pieces on display are fragile, one-of-a-kind, or historic works that cannot be reproduced. It’s such an ingrained approach to the museum-going…

Rearview Mirror: Ballet’s Saddest Story, New Art in the Sculpture Park, and a Home-Grown Wine Label Promoting Social Justice

Rearview Mirror: Ballet’s Saddest Story, New Art in the Sculpture Park, and a Home-Grown Wine Label Promoting Social Justice

Things I did, saw, ate, learned, or read in the past week (or so).

Circular Thinking I am very lucky to live just a 12-minute walk away from Seattle Art Museum’s Olympic Sculpture Park. It’s a regular destination for my weekly walks and, aside from the world-class art, has one of the city’s best views of Puget Sound. Earlier this week, I went on a wet, windy walk and discovered…

Studio Sessions: Gabriel Stromberg 

Studio Sessions: Gabriel Stromberg 

For his current show at studio e gallery, Gabriel Stromberg explores the challenges of working with clay. 

Gabriel Stromberg has been a name about town for nearly two decades. As one of the cofounders of design firm Civilization (where he was the creative director and lead designer from 2008 to 2022), Stromberg worked on many award-winning projects, helped produce the wildly popular and always packed Design Lecture Series, and co-created and moderated…

Building Connection, by Design

Building Connection, by Design

How Angela Dunleavy’s new venture is reimagining experiential marketing—and Seattle spaces.

After two decades running restaurants, a nonprofit, and a large-scale catering operation, Angela Dunleavy reached a familiar midcareer inflection point. She had helped build Ethan Stowell Restaurants, led FareStart through the pandemic, and returned to the private sector as CEO of Gourmondo. But something still felt unfinished. “What is it that I really want to…