Minimumhouse by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

Minimumhouse by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

A chunky timber shell wraps over the north facade and roof of a woodland retreat near Berlin by German architects Scheidt Kasprusch.

Minimumhouse by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

Completed in 2008, the two-storey house is fully glazed on the remaining three elevations.

Minimumhouse by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

Timber mullions act as brise soleil to shade the south facade from direct sunlight.

Minimumhouse by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

Inside the house, a staircase is located inside a central core that separates the living room from the dining room and divides the two first-floor bedrooms.

Minimumhouse by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

The dining room opens out to a decked terrace, while the master bedroom leads out to a balcony above.

Minimumhouse by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

This is the second project by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten to be featured on Dezeen this week – see our earlier story about an archive clad in Corten.

Minimumhouse by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

Photography is by Christian Gahl.

Minimumhouse by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

Here’s some more text from Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten:


The minimumhouse at Mellensee, situated to the south of Berlin, is a prototype for a serial holiday and residentialhouse. Under the label minimumhouse it is offered including all furniture and fittings.

Minimumhouse by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

The concept was developed by the ideal of a house with maximum outdoor impressions and also by making full use of the solar yields for the building.

Minimumhouse by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

The reflections of glass and light make the three-side glassed building shells appear immaterial. The team consisting of architects, engineers, building physicists and executing companies developed a modular building concept, that allows a contemporary open-plan living with high ecological and economic standards.

Minimumhouse by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

The Institute for Building and Solar Technology, Braunschweig developed in several simulations various thermic and technical alternatives for the building services to obtain the optimal solution for each location.

The annual heating requirements answer to the low-energy standard. Soil sensor, ceiling-mounted radiation heating, controlled ventilation and a heat recovery support thermic automation. A bus system constantly supervises and regulates the house.

The floor plan organisation and the ideal orientation of the house –north side closed, the other sides paned- enable active and passive use of solar energy. A solar system is placed on the extensively vegetated flat roof.

Minimumhouse by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

The northern wall is a highly insulated, two-shell timber frame construction. The southern facade is a flush fixed glazing mullion-transom construction. Sliding windows permit to open the west and east facades.

Minimumhouse by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

A core, that is placed in this volume, integrates building services, closet and flight of stairs and also divides the ground plan into zones. All materials and surfaces used for the minimumhouse have been chosen in accordance to ecological and sustainable criteria.

Minimumhouse by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

Residential house at Mellensee. Systems building in glass and wood

Minimumhouse by Scheidt Kasprusch ArchitektenMinimumhouse by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

Materials:
Northern facade: a highly insulated, two-shell timber frame construction
Southern facade: a flush fixed glazing mullion-transom construction

Concept and development: Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten
Completion: 2008
Living space: 128 sqm
Gross floor area: 151 sqm
Cubature: 514 cbm
Location: Klausdorf, Germany


See also:

.

House F11
by (se)arch
Wooden house
by Schlyter/Gezelius
Apartment building
by Znamení Čtyř

Haus der Essener Geschichte by Scheidt Kasprusch

Haus der Essener Geschichte by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

Following our recent feature about buildings clad in weathered steel, here’s an archive in Essen, Germany, that is clad in Corten.

Haus der Essener Geschichte by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

Designed by German studio Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten, the four-storey building contains a public archive for the city’s historical records and documents.

Haus der Essener Geschichte by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

The steel panels create stripes across the facade, interrupted by angled recesses concealing narrow windows.

Haus der Essener Geschichte by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

The Corten-clad block is an extension to a former school building, which was refurbished by the architects to provide administration rooms, a library and an exhibition area for the city archives.

Haus der Essener Geschichte by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

Other Corten-clad buildings from our recent feature include a winery in the south of France and a see-through church in Belgiumsee all our stories about weathered steel here.

Haus der Essener Geschichte by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

Photography is by Deimel & Wittmar.

Haus der Essener Geschichte by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

Here’s some more text from Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten:


Haus der Essener Geschichte
Conversion and rebuilding

Haus der Essener Geschichte by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

The project comprises the reconstruction of the listed Luisenschool to be used as a library, an administration and an exhibition area and also the new construction of an archive building.

Haus der Essener Geschichte by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

The accurate design of the new building and also the sensitive handling of the old building were of paramount importance.
By doing so The Luisenschool turns into focus of education and history.
The overlapping utilizations of school-library-archive-exposition demonstrates a special quality and offers new opportunities.

Haus der Essener Geschichte by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

The corten steel tables, which cover the new archive, are made of a material that constantly alters and protects itself by corrosion.
It communicates the change of time, appears protective and alludes to the background of the City of Essen.

Awarding authority: City of Essen
Concept and development: Ahlbrecht Felix Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten
Competition: 2005, 1st award
Completion: 2010
Gross floor area: 5500 sqm
Location: Essen, Germany
Materials: new archive building: corten steel tables


See also:

.

Chateau Barde-Haut
by Nadau Lavergne
Museum in Palmiry
by WXCA
Exchange by
Andre Kikoski