Stripe House by GAAGA

Horizontal grooves create tactile stripes across the plaster-covered walls of this house in Leiden, the Netherlands, by architects GAAGA (+ slideshow).

Stripe House by GAAGA

Named Stripe House, the three-storey residence is one of the 670 architect-designed homes being completed in the residential district masterplanned by architects MVRDV.

Stripe House by GAAGA

The building is located at the end of a row of houses and the stripes wrap around all three exposed elevations.

Stripe House by GAAGA

“The grooves are not purely decorative, but also have an architectural function,” architect Arie Bergsma told Dezeen. “They enhance the ‘all-sidedness’ of the volume, to link the facades and enhance the perspectival effect of the cube-like shape.”

Stripe House by GAAGA

Bergsma also explained how the grooves make the facade more tactile. “The funny thing that we did not expect is that a lot of people are actually touching the facade with their hands,” he said.

Stripe House by GAAGA

The stripy grey walls also extend beyond the front of the house to enclose a small garden, which leads residents into the dining room and kitchen on the first floor.

Stripe House by GAAGA

A concrete staircase connects the ground floor with the first floor living room, while metal stairs lead up to bedrooms on the top floor.

Stripe House by GAAGA

We’re previously featured other housing projects from the development zone in Leiden. See them all here, including two others by GAAGA.

Stripe House by GAAGA

Photography is by Marcel van der Burg.

Stripe House by GAAGA

Here are a few words from GAAGA:


Stripe House

Stripe House is a small, mixed-use house located in the city of Leiden, The Netherlands. It takes its name from the characterizing horizontal stripes carved deep into the façade.

Stripe House by GAAGA

The house resides in a new urban planning area where clients can develop their own houses. It is on a corner plot adjacent to the park nearby and south-east of pedestrian streets.

Stripe House by GAAGA

Despite its limited size, the plot is not entirely built on. One quarter of the plot is reserved for a small enclosed garden, creating a soft transition from public to private space as well as a distance to neighbouring houses. Opting for a garden implied also a concentration of program on one side of the plot.

Stripe House by GAAGA

The cube-like structure encloses a stacking of three floors, all similar in size but different in program. Going upwards the functions have an increasingly private nature. The ground floor houses the office space and the patio, the next level contains the kitchen, living and dining space, while the upper floor holds two bedrooms and a bathroom.

Stripe House by GAAGA

The large void along the north façade is the focal point in the house. It connects the two upper floors and it spatially zones the kitchen area. The enormous window at the top offers an abundance of natural light as well as an impressive and poetic sight on the Dutch sky.

Stripe House by GAAGA

Because the house is situated on a corner it has an almost all-round orientation and presence. There are not many window openings, but the ones that are present are large and oriented towards interesting views. On the first floor the three windows together form a triptych. They show three different scenes each representing a specific side of the house: the park on the east side, the neighboring houses on the west and the sky on the north.

Stripe House by GAAGA

Plans – click above for larger image

The huge exterior walls are made tangible and appealing by means of horizontal grooves in the plaster. The grooves, with a total length of approximately 7000 meters, are handmade and carved into a semi-hardened plaster by using several moulds. The result is an unparalleled piece of craftsmanship.

Stripe House by GAAGA

Section

The Stripe house is also a very sustainable house that scores well in several energy performance and environmental index calculations and labels.

Stripe House by GAAGA

Elevation detail

Architects: GAAGA
Team: Esther Stevelink and Arie Bergsma
Location: Leiden, The Netherlands
Realisation: 2010 – 2012
Contractor: Verbeij Bouw, Boskoop.
Plasterwork: Mulder Afbouw – Maarten Mulder
Structural Engineering: IMD Raadgevende Ingenieurs BV, Rotterdam
Energy performance & building physics: GAAGA – Arie Bergsma
Paintings: Marion van Egmond, Emmy Stevelink-Willemsen

The post Stripe House
by GAAGA
appeared first on Dezeen.

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