The Swoop ADU is a 750-square-foot accessory dwelling unit designed by Brooklyn-based studio Out of Line in South Orange, New Jersey. The Swoop ADU adds two bedrooms and a bathroom to an existing split-level house while creating a separate residence for a family member. Rather than repeating the neighborhood’s common gabled roof forms, the design uses an inverted gable that creates a sheltered entry and defines the building’s identity. A small terrace connects the new structure to the original home while maintaining privacy between the two residences.
The project updates both buildings through a shared material palette of charcoal stucco and light grey fiber-cement panels. The ADU introduces a butterfly roof, rotated siding, and a continuous façade line that moves across windows and openings. Inside, a double-height living area faces the garden through a large picture window and glass door.
Butterfly-Roof ADUs
The Swoop ADU Adds a Second Home Through an Inverted Gable Design
Trend Themes
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Inverted-gable Architecture — Represents a shift from traditional gabled forms to sculptural inverted roofs that support compact, identity-driven secondary dwellings.
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Compact Multi-generational Living — Signals growing demand for space-efficient ADUs that accommodate multi-generational households within existing property footprints.
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Integrated Façade Systems — Highlights demand for continuous exterior systems that unify old and new structures while offering streamlined assembly and maintenance potential.
Industry Implications
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Residential Construction — Faces the emergence of small standalone residences that alter project scopes, permitting landscapes, and onsite sequencing expectations.
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Prefab ADU Manufacturing — Sees opportunity in modular, transportable ADUs that adopt inverted-roof geometry for distinctive, compact floorplates.
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Architectural Materials — Is influenced by coordinated palettes and rotated cladding that create demand for integrated panel systems with durable, low-maintenance finishes.