understanding of place. In Mt. Lookout, that understanding begins with cedar—not as a decorative gesture but as a material commitment, the kind of aromatic, climate-responsive heartwood that answers Cincinnati's humid summers while honoring the craftsmanship embedded in these hilltop homes where nothing was ever built casually. Where Montgomery's closets spoke to the precision of newer construction, Mt. Lookout asks Silverwood to listen to existing architecture, to read the bones of a 1920s master suite and design storage systems that feel as though they were always part of the original intention. The cedar panels here carry a warmth that deepens with each season, their grain lines running like quiet testimony to the idea that a closet in this neighborhood isn't merely functional but atmospheric—a threshold you cross into where even the air shifts, and where the organization of a life's most personal possessions takes on a quality that