V-House by GAAGA

V-House by GAAGA

Dutch architecture studio GAAGA have completed this house in Leiden, the Netherlands, with a roof that pitches inwards to create a v-shaped profile.

V-House by GAAGA

Named V-House for this reason, the building forms part of a terraced row and is located on a former industrial area where experimental housing is encouraged.

V-House by GAAGA

The roof shape is emphasised internally by exposed wooden eaves, which stand out from an otherwise monochrome interior.

V-House by GAAGA

The bedrooms of the house are located on the ground floor and the living room and kitchen can be found on the open-plan, L-shaped first floor.

V-House by GAAGA

Photography is by Marcel van der Burg.

V-House by GAAGA

More projects in the Netherlands on Dezeen »

V-House by GAAGA

More stories about houses on Dezeen »

V-House by GAAGA

The following information is from the architects:


V-House, Leiden

V-House is designed for a private client and is located in the urban planning area “Nieuw Leyden”, a high dense area in the city of Leiden (The Netherlands).

V-House by GAAGA

Urban context

The site is a former industrial area near the city centre, designated by the city of Leiden as an experimental housing zone where people can develop their own homes. The local authorities supplied a schematic urban plan based on a grid, giving private persons a framework to fill in. It consists of more than a hundred plots in a pedestrian precinct. Regarding the appearance of the houses there are no limiting conditions other than a fixed maximum volume.

V-House by GAAGA

V-House is part of an ensemble of eight houses which are grouped side by side and back to back. Each house is an autonomous object designed by a different architect. The houses are connected to each other by means of a party wall. V- House is situated on a plot which has a surface area of nine by sixteen meter. The house itself is approximately nine by ten meter, leaving a space of six by ten meter for a garden at the back side of the house.

V-House by GAAGA

Architectural design
V-House is a white stucco abstract looking house of which the V-shaped roof is its most striking feature. The roof is constructed of wood and is modeled after a common saddle roof with the difference that the top is turned downwards, resulting in a dip at the centre of the house. From the outside the V-shaped roof gives the house its distinguishing and dynamic appearance and from the inside it vitalizes and intensifies the interior space. The roof is thus an important constituent of the architecture.

V-House by GAAGA

The house covers a practically square area and consists of two floors. On the outside there is no clear distinction between the floors; the façade is composed as an unambiguous whole with a cluster of windows in the middle. From the inside though, each floor has a typical program and spatial lay-out.

V-House by GAAGA

The top floor accommodates the living, dining and kitchen area. It is one open space, with a varying height of 2.8 meters at the centre to 4.1 meters at the edges. At the front corner of the floor a large void is situated. This vacant space not only links the upper floor to the ground floor, it also creates an L-shaped floor plan. The freestanding bearing wall at the inner corner of the “L“, together with the dip in the roof, divides the space in two: the kitchen and void on the left side and the living and dining area on the right. In this way the kitchen area is subtle separated from the sitting area. The interior and outward vistas, resulting from a well thought-out positioning of openings (windows, roof lights, void, and openings between the bearing wall and façade), evoke a sense of openness and spaciousness. In addition to this the use of natural materials like stone and wood contributes to an informal and friendly atmosphere.

V-House by GAAGA

Click above for larger image

The ground floor accommodates different functions which are zoned in adjacent strips parallel to the partition walls. The strip in the middle accommodates the stairway, the corridor and also the entrance hall from where a view is presented to the garden, the street, the void and the roof. Through the corridor the two other strips are opened up: at the right side a strip designated for private rooms like bedrooms and bathroom and on the left side a more than three meter wide strip accommodating a large polyvalent space. Because of the void overlapping this space, there is a strong visual relation with the kitchen and sitting area on the top floor. Furthermore, the large window situated at the top of the front façade and the casement doors at the back façade provide a view of the sky and the closed garden respectively. These interior and outward vistas in combination with the natural light coming in from above (roof lights, top window) make the space intriguing, poetic and serene.

V-House by GAAGA

Click above for larger image

Factsheet
Architects: GAAGA
Team: Esther Stevelink and Arie Bergsma
Location: Leiden, The Netherlands
Client: private
Realisation: 2008 – 2010
Contractor: Verbeij Bouw, Boskoop.
Structural Engineering: IMD, Rotterdam
Energy performance & building physics: GAAGA – Arie Bergsma

V-House by GAAGA


See also:

.

V35K18 by Pasel
Kuenzel Architects
V21K07 by Pasel
Kuenzel Architects
Villa by
Knevel Architecten

Animate Desk

This striking desk combines thoughtful design and considered functionality, showing off the internal mechanics of the drawer system. The spacious surf..

typoversity

»typoversity« presents current projects from education and studies with the main emphasis »typography« and also teachers are g..

Tower using 30000 Books

L’artiste argentine Marta Minujin a construit à Buenos Aires cette tour massive composée de 30 000 livres, faisant référence à la nomination de Buenos Aires par l’UNESCO comme capitale mondiale du livre en 2011. Plus de visuels de cette installation dans la suite de l’article.



tower-using-30000-books7

tower-using-30000-books6

tower-using-30000-books5

tower-using-30000-books4

tower-using-30000-books3

tower-using-30000-books2

tower-using-30000-book









Previously on Fubiz

Copyright Fubiz™ – Suivez nous sur Twitter et Facebook

Anatomy of an I.P. Controversy: Urban Outfitters Feels the Weight of Design Theft Allegations

For fashion retailer Urban Outfitters, this long weekend past couldn’t come quickly enough. Just before everyone left the office for barbecues, road trips, and hopefully some memorializing along the way, an accusation was leveled against the company by Chicago designer Stevie Koerner, who claimed the company had stolen the concept behind a popular set of necklaces she’d been making for her Etsy-based shop and were now selling them in stores and on their website. “My heart sank a little bit,” she wrote, “The World/United States of Love line that I created is one of the reasons that I was able to quit my full-time job. They even stole the item name as well as some of my copy.” While the retailer is no stranger to these sorts of accusations, something about this allegation took hold and by the end of the week, was everywhere, swamping Twitter and landing mentions in surprising places, like on the Apple-focused Daring Fireball. By the time pop star Miley Cyrus tweeted, “Not only do they steal from artists but every time you give them money you help finance a campaign against gay equality,” a reference to the company’s founder’s contributions to the campaign of Rick Santorum, it was all over. Originally remaining silent during the early days of the controversy, Urban Outfitters eventually issued a statement, saying that a) they did steal the idea and b) that Koerner’s idea wasn’t original to begin with, and even vaguely accused her of copying the idea from others. “…We believe the media response to her campaign is threatening to impact the dozens of independent designers we work with on a daily basis,” the company wrote on their blog. “For many of them, having their work sold at Urban Outfitters is a very positive turning point in their careers, and we will not allow their hard work and commitment, or ours, to be undermined by these false allegations.” Fortunately for the company, following that burst of negative press, the weekend came and the fires seemed to die out a bit (until, of course, people like us decided to do a wrap-up post about it). Between then and now, they also apparently decided to pull the offending product from both the site (now just a blank page) and from their stores as well. And meanwhile, Ms. Koerner received a flood of support and what sounds like more orders than she’d ever expected in record time.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Figures – Velo

L’artiste Christopher Tirrell a pu réaliser ce clip sur le titre “Velo” du groupe Figures. Composé par Jamie Blanco and James Delay, le groupe se retrouve illustré par cette vidéo à la réalisation soignée, doté d’une photographie réussie. Un clip à découvrir dans la suite.



figures-velo3

Previously on Fubiz

Copyright Fubiz™ – Suivez nous sur Twitter et Facebook

Travel report: Barcelona

Reykjavik

I have said this before, Barcelona is (together with Rome) my  favorite city in Europe and when Dutch native  Lisette van de Graaf from cute suite offered to write a report for us and share her favorite spots I was thrilled. Lisette has been living in Barcelone for more than 7 years ! I hope one day my family and I can join here 🙂

The guided tour Lisette is taking us on is a fantatstic city report you can bring whenever visiting Barcelona.

Lisette reporting from Barcelonaclick here.



Wall-art

 

516 – Northwest Angles: One Exclave May Hide Another


Railway crossings in France come with a warning now proverbial in French: Un train peut en cacher un autre. The literal translation sounds poetically vague: One train may hide another (in a railway yard version of some parlour game, perhaps). A less ambiguous rendering would be: A passing train …

Read More

Bourbon Jar Lamp

Composed primarily of off-the-shelf parts and a turned wooden base, the Jar Lamps come in two flavors: bourbon and walnut.

The oak comes from an old bourbon fermentation tank (where the yeast breaks down the sugar in the mash converting it to alcohol and carbon dioxide over a period of three days). Basically, this wood has soaked up a lot of bourbon over the years. The base is left unfinished and traces of the tank wall remain. When the bulb heats up and the jar removed, the smell of bourbon fills the air.

available for purchase.

Polymer Vision’s Rollable Flatscreen

0polymervision.jpg

While the Society for Information Display’s “Display Week 2011” doesn’t sound like the sexiest event, it was at that conference in Los Angeles that a company called Polymer Vision showed off their latest technology: A rollable flatscreen.

Polymer’s 6-inch SVGA display is 800×600 pixels and (thus far) just black-and-white, but it can be rolled into a radius of just six millimeters–meaning it would fit around a tube less than a half-inch in diameter. While integration into actual products is presumably a ways off, it’s not hard to imagine, say, scroll-shaped iPads in the future.

Europe will presumably get a look at the technology when Polymer Vision travels to LOPE-C, the upcoming Large-area Organic & Printed Electronics Conference, to be held in Frankfurt at the end of June.

via crunchgear

(more…)