Villa L by Powerhouse Company and RAU

Chunky horizontal bands divide the floors of this house in the woods outside Utrecht by architecture studios Powerhouse Company and RAU (+ slideshow).

Villa L by Powerhouse Company

Home to a family of five, the house comprises three storeys, including one that is buried underground. Living and dining rooms occupy the ground floor, while bedrooms are located upstairs and the basement floor contains guest rooms and a swimming pool.

Villa L by Powerhouse Company

The architects conceived the top floor as a “village of cabins”, which follow a different outline to the ground floor below. To achieve this, they installed a complex steel frame that surrounds a set of five rectilinear volumes.

Villa L by Powerhouse Company

“One of the most important aspects of the house is the amazing steel structure,” Powerhouse Company‘s Stijn Kemper told Dezeen. “There is this 11-metre free cantilever that makes the design possible, but the funny thing is that it’s completely covered up, so you never see the structure. It’s a strange experience.”

Villa L by Powerhouse Company

Different materials are applied to the facades at each level. On the ground floor, a wall of glazing fronts the garden-facing south facade, while the rear is clad with a mixture of glossy travertine and mirrored glass. To contrast, the top floor walls are covered with dark-stained wood but are also interspersed with mirrored glass windows.

Villa L by Powerhouse Company

Two hollows in the ground surrounding the house slope down to meet the basement floor, helping to bring natural light to the swimming pool and two guest bedrooms.

Villa L by Powerhouse Company

A small pavilion at the other end of the garden provides a playroom for the children. More mirrored glass is used to clad this structure, which can also be used as a separate guest house.

Villa L by Powerhouse Company

Charles Bessard and Nanne de Ru founded Powerhouse Company in 2005, with offices in Rotterdam and Copenhagen. This isn’t the first time the firm has teamed up with Amsterdam studio RAU, as the pair worked together to design a competition-winning dance and music centre for The Hague.

Villa L by Powerhouse Company

Other projects by Powerhouse Company include a spiral-shaped house extension and a woodland house near Arnhem. See more architecture by Powerhouse Company.

Villa L by Powerhouse Company

Photography is by Christian van der Kooy.

Villa L by Powerhouse Company

Here’s some more explanation from Powerhouse Company:


Villa L – Paradox of Uniting Diversity

Powerhouse Company, in close collaboration with RAU, recently completed Villa L. Designed to fulfill the desires and needs of a young family, Villa L is set in the woods of central Netherlands, fully oriented towards the sun and the views on the garden. Villa L is a spatially diverse residence where every floor has its own strong identity, creating a broad spatial spectrum within a unified whole.

Villa L by Powerhouse Company

A young family with three children asked Powerhouse Company to design a house that would fulfill their dreams: a paradox of a house that is simple yet surprising, open yet specific, minimal yet luxurious. Powerhouse Company resolved these contradictions with a sustainable design for a house based on a radical differentiation of spatial experiences on three floors (of which one is subterranean); the maximum buildable size on this site. Three clear levels, with three very different characters and functionalities as a basis for family life to emerge.

Villa L by Powerhouse Company

Family life

One level is for living, a generously open ground floor. A strip of serving rooms containing storage, toilets and stairs, provides easily access to the luxuriously open living spaces. The kitchen and living room are oriented maximally to the sun and view. In close relation to this living area there are two studies located on the north side next to the entrance.

Villa L by Powerhouse Company

Village of cabins

The collection of rooms on the first floor provides space for sleeping and privacy. Set in a delicate roof garden, all the bedrooms are autonomous volumes crafted in their entirety from dark wood. They work like a village of cabins, providing intimacy and privacy. Every room is like a world of its own with private views over the wooded landscape.

Villa L by Powerhouse Company

Wellness and retreat

The curved basement is for guests, wellness and storage. The excavations allow the pool and the guest rooms to have fully glazed facades and direct access to the garden.

Villa L by Powerhouse Company

Smart Sustainability

RAU designed innovative sustainable measures including a hot and cold-water storage and extensive use of hidden PV cells. The basement contains a dedicated area for the high-end energy saving installations.

Villa L by Powerhouse Company

A house designed for the hectic life of an evolving family; fragmented yet united, plural yet whole.

Villa L by Powerhouse Company

The audacious structural engineer Gilbert van der Lee, also responsible for engineering Villa 1, designed the structure, including the soaring ceiling of the living room. The interior furnishings are designed by interior designer Bart Vos.

Villa L by Powerhouse Company

Above: site plan

Location: near Utrecht, The Netherlands
Partner in charge: Nanne de Ru
Co-architect: Thomas Rau
Design: Nanne de Ru, Charles Bessard
Project leader: Stijn Kemper
Team: Ard-Jan Lootens, Bjørn Andreassen

Villa L by Powerhouse Company

Above: exploded axonometric

Structural engineering: Gilbert van der Lee – BREED Integrated Design
Sustainability: Thomas Rau – RAU
Project management: Stef Pierik – Pierik Projecten Groep BV
Contractor: Coen Hagedoorn Bouwgroep BV
Landscape design: Sander Lap – LAP Landscape & Urban design
Interior design: Bart Vos – VOS Interieur

Villa L by Powerhouse Company

Above: ground floor plan – click for larger image

Villa L by Powerhouse Company

Above: first floor plan – click for larger image

Villa L by Powerhouse Company

Above: basement floor plan – click for larger image

The post Villa L by Powerhouse Company
and RAU
appeared first on Dezeen.

The New Dance and Music Centre in The Hague by RAU Architects & Powerhouse Company

Dance and Music Centre in The Hague by RAU Architects & Powerhouse Company

This proposal by Amsterdam architects RAU and design agency Powerhouse Company is one of three projects vying to win a competition to design a dance and music centre for The Hague. 

Dance and Music Centre in The Hague by RAU Architects & Powerhouse Company

The new centre would accomodate central performance auditoriums, offices, practice rooms, and a learning centre in the roof.

Dance and Music Centre in The Hague by RAU Architects & Powerhouse Company

A vertical slither of glass at the entrance would offer views of an atrium space and plaza, while  revealing movement within the building.

Dance and Music Centre in The Hague by RAU Architects & Powerhouse Company

The design is one of three finalists, competing with Zaha Hadid Architects (see their proposal in our earlier story) and Neutelings Riedijk Architecten.

Dance and Music Centre in The Hague by RAU Architects & Powerhouse Company

More details on the competition website. The winning project will be announced this month.

Dance and Music Centre in The Hague by RAU Architects & Powerhouse Company

Here’s more information from Powerhouse Company:


The architectural concept shows the movements of the performance in the design of the auditoriums. Visible for the public: the city and the Spuiplein. The building is a stage for performing arts, but also a tribune on the Spuiplein and the city.

Dance and Music Centre in The Hague by RAU Architects & Powerhouse Company

The design of the supporting space and practice rooms form the neutral, open and flexible spatial frame in which the movement of the auditoriums find their connection to the site.

Dance and Music Centre in The Hague by RAU Architects & Powerhouse Company

It is the clear ambition of the four institutes that will be housed in the DMC to create a synergy between their institutions so that the result is more then the simple sum of four institutions.

Dance and Music Centre in The Hague by RAU Architects & Powerhouse Company

From student to top-professional, from teacher to visitor, from practice room to large auditorium: the spatial synergy within the building for a large degree will determine the synergy between the different users.

Dance and Music Centre in The Hague by RAU Architects Powerhouse Company

The constellation of users creates a truly unique cultural hybrid building that does not exist yet anywhere in the world. At the same time it poses a number of important challenges.

Dance and Music Centre in The Hague by RAU Architects & Powerhouse Company

How to create a common identity while simultaneously respecting each of the users unique background? How to combine the neutral, flexible and open space needed for the preparation and creation of performing arts with the specific, intimate and technically perfect spaces needed for performances themselves? If the building is a laboratory for performing arts that take place in time, how do we give form to this space for time?

Dance and Music Centre in The Hague by RAU Architects & Powerhouse Company

The concept can clearly be read in two parts: the clear spatial frame that creates a volume and the open space within that frame. Within this open space the fluid volumes reminisce the rhythm and movement of performances.

Dance and Music Centre by RAU Architects & Powerhouse Company

Two ‘walls’ and a ‘roof’ form the clear, rational and efficient volume that opens up towards the plaza. The back wall houses the preparation and supporting spaces that can be placed within standard office floors.

Dance and Music Centre in The Hague by RAU Architects & Powerhouse Company

In the side wall all the spaces are positioned which need exceptional height, such as the practice and dance studios. The roof houses the school and library.

Dance and Music Centre in The Hague by RAU Architects & Powerhouse Company

Under and within this rational and flexible volume lies a cascade of flowing space. In this spatial atrium the foyers and auditoriums flow over into a super public vertical landscape. The plaza extends far into the building; it flows into the atrium creating spectacular views over the city.

Dance and Music Centre in The Hague by RAU Architects & Powerhouse Company

This atrium, with its super efficient system of escalators, is the main infrastructural spine for the building: this is where not only all the different users meet each other, but also the visitors and the city. The city is always present in the view, so are the other foyers.

Dance and Music Centre in The Hague by RAU Architects & Powerhouse Company

On the level of the city, the individuality of each institute is only recognizable in the alteration of movement of the facade. Only in the interior of the building the different institutes reveal their individual nature.

Dance and Music Centre in The Hague by RAU Architects & Powerhouse Company

The result is a building with a wide range of spatial qualities. On the one hand a building with a very clear logistic and infrastructural mainframe that is ideal for studying, practicing and working. On the other hand a generous, spectacular, highly public and exciting space that is specifically geared towards maximum performances.

Dance and Music Centre by RAU Architects & Powerhouse Company

A building for dialogue and discovery – for the artists and the city. Watch the film here.

Credits:

Design team: Thomas Rau, Nanne de Ru, Marijn Emanuel, Bjørn Andreassen, Sander Apperlo, Johanne Borthne, Daan Brolsma, David Goehring, Stijn Kemper, Anne Larsen, Ard-Jan Lootens, Olen Snow MillHolland, Ania Molenda, Kaan Ozdurak, Stefan Prins, Magdalena Stanescu, Vincent Valentijn, Sybren Woudstra.

Structural design by Gilbert van der Lee / BREED ID.

Engineering advice by ARUP.

Climate advice by Octalix.

Images by MIR.


See also:

.

The New Dance and Music Centre in The Hague
by Zaha Hadid Architects
Centrum Muziek XXI by
Architecten van Mourik
Tour des Arts by
Forma 6