Contemporary. Here is a house that also has full-height glazing and some wood structure (beams, joist and decking), but I define it as contemporary because of the hybrid nature of the structure and the concrete hearth. (The firebox is on the other side, facing the living room.) If structure is exposed in a modernist house, it has a clarity and order to it, but the white steel beams below the wood joists are a disjunction that points to a different way of thinking. This departure from order is also found in the way the concrete hearth punctures the ceiling; its form does not follow the structure, so the wood joists have some unusual intersections to accommodate it.