Private House in Cologne by SMO Architektur

This house in Cologne by SMO Architektur adopts two contradicting architectural theories: the open-plan lower floor references Le Corbusier’s Plan Libre, while the multi-roomed upper floor follows the principles of Adolf Loos’ Raumplan.

Private House in Cologne by SMO Architektur

Corbusier’s Plan Libre, published in the book Vers Une Architecture in 1923, advocated spaces free from walls and partitions, so the living room, dining room and kitchen of this house occupy a single space on the ground floor, surrounded by glass walls that open it out to the garden.

Private House in Cologne by SMO Architektur

By contrast, the top floor follows Loos’ 1930s concept of Raumplan, where each room is designed for a specific purpose, with different proportions and ceiling heights.

Private House in Cologne by SMO Architektur

Plan Libre and Raumplan are two of the most influential Twentieth Century approaches to domestic architecture yet represent very different approaches to the same problem. Architecture writer Max Risselada compared the two philosophies in his book Raumplan versus Plan Libre, first published in 1987 but recently reissued.

Private House in Cologne by SMO Architektur

“In this house we unite the two opposing attitudes to architecture to combine the two contrary basic needs of humanity,” architect Seyed Mohammad Oreyzi told Dezeen. “On one side is the extrovert, that strives for liberty and the life in nature, and on the other side is the introvert, which yearns for the feeling of security and contemplation.”

Private House in Cologne by SMO Architektur

We’ve featured a couple of projects influenced by the Raumplan on Dezeen, including a housing development in the Netherlands and an apartment in Australia.

Private House in Cologne by SMO Architektur

Meanwhile, the open-plan arrangement of the Plan Libre has been adopted as a common style by architects ever since.

Private House in Cologne by SMO Architektur

White-plastered walls surround the cluster of rectilinear volumes that make up the upper floor, which also features square windows of three different sizes.

Private House in Cologne by SMO Architektur

A bridge connects the top floor of the house with the street, so residents enter at this level and work their way down rather than up.

Private House in Cologne by SMO Architektur

See more houses in Germany »

Private House in Cologne by SMO Architektur

Photography is by Rainer Mader.

Here’s a full description of the project from SMO Architektur:


Cloud² represents flexible room designs. It is customized to the client’s requests – living areas for the second period of life without children were created, which integrate the charm of a historical building into a new construction.

Private House in Cologne by SMO Architektur

The project combines two contrary basic needs of humanity. On one side the extrovert, that strives for liberty and the life in the nature and on the other side the introvert, which yearns for the feeling of security and contemplation.

Private House in Cologne by SMO Architektur

The draft combines two iconic layout-typologies – Adolf Loos’ floor plans and the plan Libre Le Corbusier’s. It is a hybrid.

Private House in Cologne by SMO Architektur

First floor plan – click above for larger image and key

As the ground floor at the level of a garden almost consists of one open room, the first floor divides itself into a variety of different proportional bodies, which seem to float over the glassy ground floor like a cloud. The individual disposition of the volumes support the introverted living.

Private House in Cologne by SMO Architektur

Ground floor plan – click above for larger image and key

The property is located at south of Cologne, in an idyllic environment with lots of greenland, bordering to a historical court. In the immediate neighbourhood there is a small guesthouse, which is a project that was developed in 2005 in cooperation with Oswald Mathias Ungers.

Private House in Cologne by SMO Architektur

Basement plan – click above for larger image and key

The idea to frame the ground floor maximum open and transparent and to close the first floor on the street level was caused by the difference in height between the property and the street.

Following the idea of transformation to experience the turn of public to private living, the building is accessed by a bridge.

Private House in Cologne by SMO Architektur

Section – click above for larger image

The entrance-tier is a split-level, which connects the first floor’s and the basement’s tier. From here on two viewing directions pursue – on the one hand across the open housing space of the ground floor way through the garden and on the other hand upwards to the first floor’s rooms. One of two nurseries is in the entrance-tier. On the first floor there is third one in addition with a bathroom und the parent’s area, which is designed as a suite.

Private House in Cologne by SMO Architektur

Front elevation – click above for larger image

From the entrance you can see an even flight of stairs, which is exactly set in the access route down to the bathed in light ground floor. At the longitudinal side of the room there is the kitchen- and the dining area, opposite to the living area. On the rearward side of the street the closed library affiliates itself with an entry to a courtyard.

Private House in Cologne by SMO Architektur

Side elevation – click above for larger image

The ground floor tier is characterized by spatial generosity and transparency, which creates a tight connection between outdoor space and internal space. The flagrant facade post and its irregularly rhythm and the thin solid steel-pillars on which the whole first floor bears generate a very light disbanded room border.

Private House in Cologne by SMO Architektur

Rear elevation – click above for larger image

The first floor’s rooms formally push themselves down and cause different ceiling heights. This enables visual connections from the inside to the outside and creates there with purposeful spatial atmosphere.

Three different square window formats perforate the first floor’s introverted rooms. The disposal of the windows produces an individual light enactment of every room and avoids the range of vision to the neighbours. Another feature is the original roof landscape, which gives rise to a stepped water garden in the form of cascades when it rains.

Private House in Cologne by SMO Architektur

Side elevation – click above for larger image

Project status: Completed 2012
Team: smo architektur
Designer: S M Oreyzi
Area: 380 m2
Location: Cologne / Germany
Costs: 780.000 €

The post Private House in Cologne
by SMO Architektur
appeared first on Dezeen.

KE 12 Townhouse by SoHo Architektur

The square windows and mansard roof silhouette of this Bavarian townhouse by German architects SoHo Architektur are an echo of the building that formerly occupied the site (+ slideshow).

KE 12 by SoHo Architektur

The house in Memmingen is split into two properties, each with its own entrance from the street in front.

KE 12 by SoHo Architektur

Although the ground floor is divided down the middle from front to back, the upper three storeys are split into front and rear halves.

KE 12 by SoHo Architektur

A pair of central staircases interwine as flights lead to alternating sides of the house, giving each residence one floor with a balcony overlooking the garden.

KE 12 by SoHo Architektur

The rear facade is horizontally clad in dark timber, while the front elevation is bright white and features overhangs that define each of the storeys.

KE 12 by SoHo Architektur

We’ve previously featured another building by the same architects – a house in Bavaria with corrugated walls.

KE 12 by SoHo Architektur

Photographs are by Rainer Retzlaff.

KE 12 by SoHo Architektur

Here’s some more information from the architects:


Located in the southern part of the historic centre of Memmingen, this is a townhouse with two housing units. Designed as a ‘three-window house’, 
its appearance towards the street represents the typical image of a townhouse.

KE 12 by SoHo Architektur

Above: building that formerly occupied the site

The contour of the mansard roof, the structural level and the footprint of the former building were all adopted and adapted to today’s requirements.

KE 12 by SoHo Architektur

A punctuated facade including a back-fill of the gable per floor, interprets in a pure way historical themes of decoration and form design.

KE 12 by SoHo Architektur

Ground floor plan – click above for larger image

Each unit has its own access from the Kempter Street and each one leads through four storeys from the ground floor to the attic storey.

KE 12 by SoHo Architektur

First floor plan – click above for larger image

The arrangement of stairs in the centre of the building enables an access zone to tie the two units both to the public Kempter Street and to the private yard in the west.

KE 12 by SoHo Architektur

Second floor plan – click above for larger image

From the second floor on, the rooms additionally orientate themselves towards north side and respectively south side.

KE 12 by SoHo Architektur

Thus, a multifaceted and flexibly usable living environment with garden, 
balcony and roof terrace is generated which offers many amenities of living in the countryside but in the middle of the city.

The post KE 12 Townhouse by
SoHo Architektur
appeared first on Dezeen.

House 11×11 by Titus Bernhard Architekten

Slideshow: there are no horizontal crossbeams to interrupt the vertically striped wooden batons that clad this house outside Munich by German architects Titus Bernhard.

House 11x11 by Titus Bernhard Architekten

Matching wooden slats frame the building’s deep-set windows, which fold around the corners of walls as well as up over the concealed eaves.

House 11x11 by Titus Bernhard Architekten

The structure below the wooden cladding is constructed from prefabricated elements that were assembled onsite.

House 11x11 by Titus Bernhard Architekten

The name of the three-storey residence is House 11×11, which relates to its square shaped dimensions in plan.

House 11x11 by Titus Bernhard Architekten

The lowest level is an underground basement, while an open-plan living and dining room occupies the ground floor and a bedroom and two offices are located upstairs.

House 11x11 by Titus Bernhard Architekten

See more houses in Germany here.

House 11x11 by Titus Bernhard Architekten

Photography is by Jens Weber & Orla Conolly.

House 11x11 by Titus Bernhard Architekten

Here’s some more information from Titus Bernhard Architekten:


House 11×11

The idea behind House 11 x 11 was to design an apparently compact house of homogenous materials, with a low external surface but as large a usable area as possible, a house that serves a family as an inhabitable sculpture and shows its exterior as an image of the inner organization.

House 11x11 by Titus Bernhard Architekten

House 11 x 11 is an icon for its users, symbolic and built with a new method of construction: the exterior walls and the wooden roof made of prefabricated elements are covered by a vertical wood-lamella façade without counter-battens, converging on the ridge of the roof.

House 11x11 by Titus Bernhard Architekten

A pronounced graphic character is the result, reinforced by the variable density and very precise setting of the lamellae, including the integration of the wooden window frames.

House 11x11 by Titus Bernhard Architekten

The inner organization expresses itself in the open-plan floor space of the ground floor, containing a kernel for secondary uses as a space continuum, connecting optically with the upper story by means of airspaces and cleverly designed lighting.

House 11x11 by Titus Bernhard Architekten