Pascal Flammer’s House in Balsthal features wooden braces and a circular window

This house in northern Switzerland, by local architect Pascal Flammer, frames views of a vast rural landscape through round and rectangular windows, as well as through entire walls of glazing (+ slideshow).

House in Balsthal by Pascal Flammer

Located between a wheat field and a thicket of woodland, House in Balsthal is an archetypal wooden cabin with a steeply pitched roof and overhanging eaves, but also integrates modern touches such as full-height glazing and flush detailing.

House in Balsthal by Pascal Flammer

Pascal Flammer specified timber for the building’s structure, cladding and joinery. Externally, the wooden surfaces are stained black, while inside the material is left uncoloured to show its natural grain.

House in Balsthal by Pascal Flammer

Criss-crossing timber braces support the structure and are visible from both inside and outside.

House in Balsthal by Pascal Flammer

The base of the house is sunken into the earth by 75 centimetres, allowing the surrounding ground level to line up with the bottom of windows that surround the building’s lower storey.

House in Balsthal by Pascal Flammer

“In this space there is a physical connection with the nature outside the continuous windows,” explained Flammer.

House in Balsthal by Pascal Flammer

A large fuss-free space accommodating a kitchen, living room and dining area occupies this entire floor. Cupboards built into the walls create an uninterrupted surface around the edges and can function as worktops, desks or seating.

House in Balsthal by Pascal Flammer

While this storey features noticeably low ceilings, the bedroom floor above comes with angular ceilings defined by the slope of the roof. “The height defines the space,” said Flammer.

House in Balsthal by Pascal Flammer

The upper floor is divided up evenly to create three bedrooms and a bathroom. Each room has one glazed wall, but the round window also straddles two rooms to create semi-circular apertures.

House in Balsthal by Pascal Flammer

“Whereas the ground floor is about connecting with the visceral nature of the context, the floor above is about observing nature – a more distant and cerebral activity,” added Flammer.

House in Balsthal by Pascal Flammer

A spiral staircase winds up through the centre of the building to connect the two floors with a small basement level underneath.

House in Balsthal by Pascal Flammer

Photography is by Ioana Marinescu.

House in Balsthal by Pascal Flammer
Site plan – click for larger image
Ground floor plan of House in Balsthal by Pascal Flammer
Ground floor plan – click for larger image
House in Balsthal by Pascal Flammer
Ground floor plan – click for larger image
House in Balsthal by Pascal Flammer
First floor plan – click for larger image
House in Balsthal by Pascal Flammer
Long section – click for larger image
House in Balsthal by Pascal Flammer
Cross section – click for larger image
House in Balsthal by Pascal Flammer
Side elevation – click for larger image

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House extension with stepping stones leading inside by Haberstroh Schneider Architekten

Swiss firm Haberstroh Schneider Architekten has extended a house in Basel by adding a chain of three rooms, creating a new semi-enclosed courtyard that is filled with stepping stones (+ slideshow).

Haus von Arx by Haberstroh Schneider Architekten

Haberstroh Schneider Architekten removed a number of previous extensions to reduce Haus von Arx to its original size, before adding the new volumes to the western edge of the building to provide a home office and library.

Haus von Arx by Haberstroh Schneider Architekten

The architects designed the courtyard and stepping stones to allow the family to move between the existing house and the extension.

Haus von Arx by Haberstroh Schneider Architekten

“We wanted this area, as small as it is, to be a space for contemplation, where movements slow down and one is not able to rush through,” they told Dezeen.

Haus von Arx by Haberstroh Schneider Architekten

A sheltered porch creates a separate entrance for the extension, leading through to a library with floor-to-ceiling bookshelves, and then on into the small office.

Haus von Arx by Haberstroh Schneider Architekten

The architects also added a guest bedroom and bathroom above the house’s existing garage, as well as a new swimming pool and pavilion on the east side of the building.

Haus von Arx by Haberstroh Schneider Architekten

The exterior of the extensions is finished in white render, contrasting with the grainy grey-painted facade of the main house.

Haus von Arx by Haberstroh Schneider Architekten

Existing living rooms and bedrooms were left to their original layout, but a curving staircase with iron balustrades was painted in a deep shade of green.

Haus von Arx by Haberstroh Schneider Architekten

“We wanted to enhance the very elegant stairs so we decided to paint them a dark green that, besides contrasting with the rest of the house, is a colour used traditionally on the interior of historical, wealthy and important houses,” added the architects.

Haus von Arx by Haberstroh Schneider Architekten

Photography is by Fernando Guerra.

Here’s a project description from the architects:


Haus von Arx

The former building – originally built in 1951 – had been extended, converted and renovated several times over the past years. As a consequence, it presented itself as an accumulation of heterogeneous rooms and styles.

Haus von Arx by Haberstroh Schneider Architekten

In discussions with the new owner we developed the idea of reducing the building to both its original size and primary qualities.

Haus von Arx by Haberstroh Schneider Architekten

The dismantling of all the old additional elements called for a controlled addition of new expansions.

Haus von Arx by Haberstroh Schneider Architekten

These new volumes were clustered at the western side of the plot, touching the old building only in one place.

Haus von Arx by Haberstroh Schneider Architekten

While the old building had been freed from any disturbing elements and thus restored to its classic elegance, the new cubes present a composition of simple and plastically reduced volumes.

Haus von Arx by Haberstroh Schneider Architekten

The cubes, according to their different position, spacing and size, create fascinating passageway- and patio-situations with the old building.

Haus von Arx by Haberstroh Schneider Architekten

To the south-western side of the plot we removed the former winter garden. In its place we constructed a generous, open garden pavilion which works well as mediating element between old building, pool area and the garden.

Haus von Arx by Haberstroh Schneider Architekten

Architects: Haberstroh Schneider Architekten, Basel
Planners: Proplaning AG, Basel Schnetzer Puskas Ingenieure AG, Basel ProEngineering AG, Basel Stokar + Partner AG, Basel Locher, Schwittay Gebäudetechnik GmbH, Basel August + Margrith Künzel Landschaftsarchitekten AG, Binningen
Place: Binningen BL, Schweiz
Year of construction: 2012

Ground floor plan of Haus von Arx by Haberstroh Schneider Architekten
Ground floor plan – click for larger image
First floor plan of Haus von Arx by Haberstroh Schneider Architekten
First floor plan – click for larger image
Section one of Haus von Arx by Haberstroh Schneider Architekten
Long section one – click for larger image
Haus von Arx by Haberstroh Schneider Architekten
Long section two – click for larger image
Section three of Haus von Arx by Haberstroh Schneider Architekten
Cross section one – click for larger image
Section four of Haus von Arx by Haberstroh Schneider Architekten
Cross section two – click for larger image

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House renovation in Saignelégier by Dubail Begert Architectes

Artificial grass blankets one wall of this renovated house in Switzerland by local studio Dubail Begert Architectes (+ slideshow).

House renovation in Saignelégier by Dubail Begert Architectes

Architects Sylvain Dubail and David Begert were tasked with improving the thermal efficiency of the two-storey 1970s house in Saignelégier, north-west Switzerland.

House renovation in Saignelégier by Dubail Begert Architectes

After adding extra insulation, they installed a new facade intended to reference the surrounding ground surfaces.

House renovation in Saignelégier by Dubail Begert Architectes

The rear wall is covered with artificial turf to match the garden lawn, while corrugated fibre-cement panels clad three walls and the roof as a nod to the grey tarmac of the road.

House renovation in Saignelégier by Dubail Begert Architectes

The architects compare the appearance to agricultural structures. “The house refuses the romantic and nostalgic ode to the bygone campaign and scoops out its inspirations contrariwise from the contemporary farm sheds,” they said.

House renovation in Saignelégier by Dubail Begert Architectes

Interior spaces are kept simple, with clean white walls and floors, wooden furniture and ceilings, plus a few details picked out in green.

House renovation in Saignelégier by Dubail Begert Architectes

Other projects on Dezeen to feature artificial grass include a cook-for-yourself restaurant in Lithuania and the former home and studio of pop artist Roy Lichtenstein.

House renovation in Saignelégier by Dubail Begert Architectes

See more houses in Switzerland, including one with a corner missing from its roof and one lifted off a hillside on gigantic concrete columns.

House renovation in Saignelégier by Dubail Begert Architectes

Here’s some more text from Dubail Begert Architectes:


Transformation residential house Saignelégier

Located in a residential area, this house built in 1974 is isolated outside to answer contemporary thermal requirements.

House renovation in Saignelégier by Dubail Begert Architectes

The facades plays on the theme of the mimicry with the materials of the floors of the outdoor spaces: place of access in bitumen and grassy garden. The three facades road side and the roof are coated with plates of fibre-cement corrugated anthracites (eternit), the facade garden side is coated with artificial turf.

House renovation in Saignelégier by Dubail Begert Architectes

The surface of outside spaces is extended so at the farthest and tends to remove the home in its stereotypic context of a neighbourhood of houses, delaying so in doubt the icon of sacrosanct single-family home.

House renovation in Saignelégier by Dubail Begert Architectes

In the middle of a quarter of villas of the years 70-80, composed in the majority of houses drawing inspiration from the traditional farm of the Swiss Jura mountains, the house refuses the romantic and nostalgic ode to the bygone campaign and scoops out its inspirations contrariwise from the contemporary farm sheds, to remind of the past close to a residential quarter and ask the question of the rurban sprawl and the maintenance of environmental heritage.

House renovation in Saignelégier by Dubail Begert Architectes

Indoors, reality plays wood between the white and according to the level of privacy of areas.

House renovation in Saignelégier by Dubail Begert Architectes
Ground floor plan
House renovation in Saignelégier by Dubail Begert Architectes
First floor plan

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by Dubail Begert Architectes
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Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

A pitched roof and six walls appear as a single block of concrete around these two residences in Geneva by Swiss architects clavienrossier (+ slideshow).

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

Named Two In One Villa, the building contains a pair of three-storey apartments separated by a party wall. Both have their own front doors and one is significantly larger than the other.

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

Grône-based clavienrossier gave the building a hexagonal plan to break down its scale, then used a uniform pale-grey concrete for all six elevations.

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

“The split geometry of the facades makes it difficult to get a grasp of the real size of the building, giving each individual facade a more domestic scale,” say the architects.

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

Larch-framed doors, windows and skylights puncture the walls and roof. Many of them are recessed to create balconies and terraces on every floor, but they follow a rectilinear grid rather than the angles of the walls.

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

Combined kitchen and living rooms occupy the ground floors of both apartments, while bedrooms and bathrooms are located on the first and second floors.

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

The site is flanked by woodland to the south and fields to the west, but has enough space for a large garden with a swimming pool stretching along one edge.

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

Another project we’ve featured by clavienrossier is a residence in the Swiss Alps where two concrete volumes sit atop the remains of a stone house. See more houses in Switzerland.

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

Photography is by Roger Frei.

Here’s some more information from clavienrossier:


Two in one villa
Geneva, Switzerland, 2012

The site is located on the edge of a residential zone on the outskirts of Geneva, flanked on its southern border by a forest and opening out to fields to the west. It sits right on the line between the city and nature.

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

The building, backed by a paved access ramp, is placed in the north-east corner of the site. The space between the building and the forest allows for a swimming pool and a large open garden.

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

The program includes two apartments of differing size, a continuous party wall separates the two.

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

A pitched roof over a diamond shaped plan, allows each apartment to have its own orientation. This distinct geometry allows for a greater degree of privacy for the residents and when viewed from the outside, gives the impression of a single unit.

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

The split geometry of the facades makes it difficult to get a grasp of the real size of the building, giving each individual facade a more domestic scale.

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

The exterior envelope of the building is entirely composed of integrally-coloured concrete, including the roof. Loggias built out of larch, perforate the facade and the roof of the building.

The building conforms to very high energy standards.

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier
Ground floor plan – click for larger image
Two In One Villa by clavienrossier
First floor plan – click for larger image
Two In One Villa by clavienrossier
Second floor plan – click for larger image
Two In One Villa by clavienrossier
Cross section – click for larger image
Two In One Villa by clavienrossier
North-east elevation – click for larger image
Two In One Villa by clavienrossier
North-west elevation – click for larger image
Two In One Villa by clavienrossier
South-west elevation – click for larger image
Two In One Villa by clavienrossier
South-east elevation – click for larger image

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House in Sonvico by Architetti Pedrozzi e Diaz Saravia

This rural house in Switzerland by local studio Architetti Pedrozzi e Diaz Saravia is raised off the hillside on a pair of gigantic concrete columns (+ slideshow).

House in Sonvico by Architetti Pedrozzi e Diaz Saravia

The single-storey House in Sonvico is constructed on a 20-metre long concrete slab, which is elevated above the ground on one side to line up with the highest level of the site.

House in Sonvico by Architetti Pedrozzi e Diaz Saravia

“We and the clients both wanted to create a single-storey house,” architect Martino Pedrozzi told Dezeen. “Because of the slope, we invented a level section.”

House in Sonvico by Architetti Pedrozzi e Diaz Saravia

Rather than create an entrance at the point where the building meets the ground, Architetti Pedrozzi e Diaz Saravia designed the house with a hollow centre so that residents climb up from underneath to enter. This arrangement also creates a terrace beneath the building with a swimming pool alongside.

House in Sonvico by Architetti Pedrozzi e Diaz Saravia

Timber-framed windows sit within the houses’s chunky concrete frame. White ceramic tiles clad any walls between and feature a mixture of polished and matte finishes.

House in Sonvico by Architetti Pedrozzi e Diaz Saravia

The rooms of the house are arranged in sequence around the perimeter, while a corridor runs around the inside. There are also circular rooms inside the columns and one contains a staircases so it can double up as a second entrance.

House in Sonvico by Architetti Pedrozzi e Diaz Saravia

Other houses completed recently in Switzerland include a family home with a corner missing from its roof and a house with vertical seams. See more Swiss houses on Dezeen.

Photography is by Pino Brioschi.

Here’s a project description from Architetti Pedrozzi e Diaz Saravia:


House in Sonvico

A one storey house on a quite steep slope. That was the challenge imposed by topography and client. A most welcome challenge of course: to us one storey architecture is the best condition for good architecture. Its solution stays in the section of the project: a big horizontal prestressed slab of fifteen by twenty metres sitting on the natural land on one hand and laying on two gigantic round pillars on the opposite site. Above twenty pillars sustain the roof. Under a main space is created for outdoor living.

House in Sonvico by Architetti Pedrozzi e Diaz Saravia
First floor plan – click for larger image

The house structure is external and integrally made in concrete. None of its parts penetrate the internal insulated spaces that are organised around a central void, between slab and roof. Ceramic white tiles, shiny and opaque defining a graphic pattern, contrast with concrete and enclose the indoor living spaces.

House in Sonvico by Architetti Pedrozzi e Diaz Saravia
Ground floor plan – click for larger image

Where the house lays on the ground, there is the access. Descending upstream the slope a big porch introduces the house main door. Inside, the square-shaped ground floor is divided between public and private spaces. Public spaces like entrance hall, living room, dining room and studio are placed in the middle of the sides. Private spaces like bedrooms and kitchen find their place in the corners and when it is necessary can be isolated from the rest.

House in Sonvico by Architetti Pedrozzi e Diaz Saravia
Cross section – click for larger image

The central void makes the connection between indoor and outdoor living spaces. A staircase leads down to a paved and partially covered surface integrating a swimming pool, a laying and a dining area, surrounded by an impressive natural environment.

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Architetti Pedrozzi e Diaz Saravia
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Private House Bellmund by EXH Design

This family house in Switzerland by Chinese architects EXH Design has a corner missing from its roof to allow space for a triangular roof terrace (+ slideshow).

Private House Bellmund by EXH Design

Home to a family of four, the two-storey residence is located in Bellmund, an agricultural region on the outskirts of Biel.

Private House Bellmund by EXH Design

EXH Design designed the house with a timber frame and interior, but clad the exterior with corrugated panels that are bolted into place across the walls and roof.

Private House Bellmund by EXH Design

“The industrial panels are a rough and weather-resistant material with low costs,” the architects told Dezeen. “In contrast to the modest and functional exterior, the wooden structure is revealed within to give the interior an inviting sense of warmth.”

Private House Bellmund by EXH Design

The building features a gabled roof profile with an asymmetric shape. “The structure’s ‘house’ shape maximises its height to ensure views of Lake Biennem,” added the architects.

Private House Bellmund by EXH Design

Floor-to-ceiling windows separate the roof terrace from a large second-floor loft, while three bedrooms occupy the first floor and a large living and dining room covers the ground floor.

Private House Bellmund by EXH Design

Large and small windows are also dotted across each elevation and over the sloping roof.

Private House Bellmund by EXH Design

A canopy projects from the southern corner of the building, sheltering a small patio where residents can dine outdoors.

Private House Bellmund by EXH Design

Other houses completed in Switzerland in the last year include a concrete residence with folded elevations and a hillside holiday home in the Swiss Alps. See more architecture in Switzerland.

Private House Bellmund by EXH Design

Above: ground floor plan

Private House Bellmund by EXH Design

Above: first floor plan

Private House Bellmund by EXH Design

Above: second floor plan

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by EXH Design
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Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Swiss architect Gus Wüstemann used raw concrete, oak and travertine to create the smooth walls and floors of this home and poolhouse overlooking Lake Zurich (+ slideshow).

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

“The use of raw materials is essential for our work,” Wüstemann told Dezeen. “It’s that kind of atmosphere we’re looking for – authentic surfaces with character.”

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Describing the concrete structure of the house, he said: “It’s about mass and feeling the power. Concrete is a further step in the culture of stony architecture, but it’s still a stone and you can feel all the work of the construction behind it.”

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

The two buildings are positioned at different levels of a sloping site, with the swimming pool and pavilion at the lowest level, while the house sits above on the other side of a small garden.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Concrete dominates the walls of the house, but the facade is clad with timber to match the pavilion opposite, which is solely clad with wooden panels.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Frameless walls of glass slide open across the facade of the house, connecting living rooms on the ground and first floors with a terrace and balcony that overlook the lake.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Bedrooms are located on the ground floor, while a movie room, gym and wine cellar are housed in the basement.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

We’ve featured a few projects by Gus Wüstemann, most of which also feature raw materials – see them all here.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Other Swiss houses we’ve featured include a holiday home in the Alps and a concrete house with folded seams.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

See more projects in Switzerland »

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Photography is by Bruno Helbling.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Here’s a project description from the architects:


2 Verandas

This is a house for a young South African family in Erlenbach, just outside Zurich along the lake.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

The plot is in a suburban context and therefor pretty dense with family homes, typical for the area. The site is on a slope, where on top there are beautiful views to the lake with evening sun and at the lower part there is a group of smaller family houses.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

The clients asked us for a solution for a house that made the most of the big plot, wanting a view, but not end up with a house on top of the hill and a rest of a garden down below.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Periphery

Our solution for this plot was to occupy the periphery of the site, with the main house on top of the hill and the pool house at the bottom, both houses connected through a solid stony promenade: 2 verandas.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

By occupying the periphery: there is one veranda at the top, the promenade is going alongside the eastern boarder of the plot leading to the south end, there is a park in the middle of the site.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

The park can be consumed as nature from all three sides and therefor there is no ‘left over’ land. The stony promenade connects the two verandas, is a site of its own, where you walk or sit and enjoy the view to the lake or the park. With the promenade, the garden moves up to the level of the living room and it connects all levels of the house with the garden.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

2 verandas

The main house is a stony, concrete, hammer shaped volume over two levels, that contains the living rooms. In the upper part is the‚ public ‘living room for invitations and dining with a beautiful view over the lake of Zurich. On the ground level is the family lounge with an exterior patio that can be joined as one room with the living room. All the windows disappear and the inside and outside patio become one. That patio connects all bedrooms and is a lounge to sit together privately and watch a movie.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

The circulations in and out of that space are controlled by concrete volumes at the ceiling that condense the space through mass and light and slow the circulation.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

The two rooms are crossed above each other, at the ground floor level we pull a wooden curtain around the concrete volume to create the private sleeping quarters.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

The upper living room has a shark fin like shape, so the space is very high at the back of the space with northern sky lights, and is lower at the front to frame the view.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Mass with no windows

The inside and the outside are joined, as we let all the windows disappear, so there is only the concrete mass left. The inside becomes a covered outside space: Mediterranean feeling in the northern hemisphere.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

The absence of the window is the essential instrument to actually unite in and outside space; it is the glass itself that reminds us of the border of in and outside. In many projects nowadays this fact is neglected or simply ignored and therefore glass is used in an extensive way.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Mass and light

We chose natural and raw materials like concrete, travertine or wood. The concrete is formed and communicates with the space through light gaps that give that extra feeling of finesse to the shear mass of the concrete. Throughout the whole house indirect lights are giving directions, and attract the periphery of the spaces rather than the centre. The indirect light is creating the atmosphere.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

On the underground floor there is a gym, a movie room and wine cellar all arranged around the light up masses of the concrete that give the house a whole different playful area. There is raw concrete and raw wood and therefore a lot of texture.

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Basement plan – click above for larger image

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Ground floor plan – click above for larger image

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

First floor plan – click above for larger image

Two Verandas by Gus Wüstemann

Section – click above for larger image

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Wohnhaus Ginkgo by on3 architekten

This concrete house in Switzerland by Basel studio on3 architekten has gabled end walls that appear folded along central vertical seams (+slideshow).

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

An exposed concrete staircase connects the three storeys of Wohnhaus Ginkgo and is suspended behind a balustrade of taught wires between the two upper floors.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

A large dormer window increases the amount of inhabitable space on the top floor, which overlooks the corridor on the floor below.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

Other Swiss houses on Dezeen include a holiday home in the Alps and a renovated farm building.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

See more houses in Switzerland »

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

Photography is by Börje Müller.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

The text below is from on3 architekten:


House Ginkgo

The house is located in the center of Oberwil, in the north-west of Switzerland.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

The neighbourhood is designed by older one family houses and small stores. Due to its geometry, the house offers an unconventional floor plan with comfort, flexibility and space to move.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

As the rooms are linked and correspond to each other, they are ideal for family life with space for individual creativity.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

The open kitchen and the living room, which are on the same level as the terrace in the garden, form one area.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

A large glass facade is the only separation between the interior and the external space. The two upper floors offer private rooms, seperated by sliding doors.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

Site plan- click above for larger image

The gallery in the attic gives a wonderful view over the roofs of Oberwil and completes the concept of the flexible and open floor plans. The centre of the house is a stair made of exposed concrete.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

Ground floor plan- click above for larger image

It connects the house in the vertical.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

First floor plan- click above for larger image

The robust and massive concrete sets a contrast to the fine, light white oak parquet floor.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

Second floor plan- click above for larger image

A special feature of the house is the frameless, partly room-high glazing.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

Longitudinal section- click above for larger image

Thematically, they are used in every room and open the house to the external space. Thus, the rooms receive a generous, light and friendly atmosphere.

Wohnhaus Gingko by on3 architekten

Cross section- click above for larger image

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by on3 architekten
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