An avid birdwatcher, Marie McDonald told Hajjar that she wanted to be able to watch birds from every room in the house. Hajjar pretty much gave her her wish. The house was sited so that there were large trees visible from each room and the spacious grounds have numerous bird feeders suspended from tree limbs. A free-standing one is clearly visible on the right of the picture. When the time came recently to leave the house for a retirement facility, the primary request to the new buyers was that they take care of her birds.
Unlike most other Hajjar houses, the main living level is all on the second floor, so that one is living among the tree tops. While on a much smaller scale, the house is reminiscent of
Frank Lloyd Wright's famous Robie House in Chicago. In addition to a raised main level, a grand staircase rises from the entry to reveal an open living area with large dining and living rooms split by a dominant two-sided fireplace. The dining room features built-in storage and large glass windows are all around. Unlike the Chicago location, the views are all scenic.
The visually interesting raised entrance porch is shaded by a screen of quarry tile laid horizontally. The dining room windows are visible over the top. The living room is to the right, with a window wall on the far end and is over a family room on the ground level with a sunken patio. The kitchen is to the immediate left of the dining room and bedrooms are to the far left. The garage opens on the left end at ground level.