House For All Seasons by John Lin

Architect John Lin has adapted the traditional style of a rural Chinese courtyard residence to create a village house that is entirely self-sufficient.

House For All Seasons by John Lin

Lin, who is an architecture professor at the University of Hong Kong, designed the house in Shijia Village, north-eastern China, as a model that would encourage village residents to be less dependent on outside goods and services.

House For All Seasons by John Lin

A number of courtyards are contained behind the walls of the house, accommodating a pig pen and an underground biogas boiler that generates energy from the animal waste.

House For All Seasons by John Lin

Wide staircases provide areas for planting crops, which can be fertilised using leftover slurry from the boiler and dried on the roof of the house.

House For All Seasons by John Lin

During the rainy season the roof is also used to collect water, which filters down into a large container and can be stored throughout the year.

House For All Seasons by John Lin

Just like a traditional village residence, the building has insulating mud walls, but also features a concrete frame to increase earthquake-resistance and a latticed brick exterior that provides both shade and natural ventilation.

House For All Seasons by John Lin

House For All Seasons recently won first prize in the AR House 2012 awards. Last year’s winner was a house covered in rubber and the winning project in 2010 was a house with shutters weighted by concrete balls.

House For All Seasons by John Lin

Here’s a press release from the Architectural Review:


Constructing China: Award-winning Architects Lead the Way

House For All Seasons by John Lin

The Architectural Review presents its prestigious 2012 House Award to Chinese architect John Lin, joining an international community of critics who are recognising the excellence and innovation of contemporary architects working in China today.

House For All Seasons by John Lin

This is the year of the Chinese architect. The Architectural Review has presented its 2012 House Award to John Lin, a Hong Kong-based architect whose innovative work takes him into the interstices of the extraordinary transformation underway in China’s cities, towns and rural areas.

House For All Seasons by John Lin

Lin’s winning project is an updated version of the vernacular mud brick courtyard house that populates China’s vast rural areas.

House For All Seasons by John Lin

His design for a modern prototype of this traditional locus of rural life, increasingly at risk, brings together both old and new, incorporating concrete technology with original mud brick construction.

House For All Seasons by John Lin

Central to the design is the idea of self-sufficiency. The multifunctional roof provides a space for drying food, steps for seating and a means to collect water in the rainy season.

House For All Seasons by John Lin

Four courtyards accommodate, among many household activities, a place for keeping pigs and an underground biogas system that produces energy for cooking.

House For All Seasons by John Lin

The entire structure is surrounded by a brick screen wall that protects the mud walls and shades the interior.

House For All Seasons by John Lin

According to Lin, his contemporary update of the traditional Chinese rural house will help “villages [reduce] their dependency on outside goods and services”.

House For All Seasons by John Lin

Click above for larger image

By “evolving” rather than “preserving”, he says, “we’re actually working to prevent a rural ghetto.”

House For All Seasons by John Lin

Click above for larger image

Catherine Slessor, awards jury chair, notes that “Lin’s new twist on an old format points the way to responding to China’s unprecedented housing challenges in original ways, by retaining the best of the past while embracing a rapidly changing future.”

House For All Seasons by John Lin

Click above for larger image

 

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Competition: five copies of Brick’12 to be won

five copies of Brick'12 to be won

Competition: we’ve teamed up with Wienerberger to offer readers the chance to win one of five copies of Brick’12, the accompanying book for the Wienerbeger Brick Awards 2012 that took place last week.

five copies of Brick'12 to be won

Brick’12 presents award-winning international architecture using clay products, featuring the nominated and winning designs from the fifth of the biennial awards.

five copies of Brick'12 to be won

The bilingual book (German and English) published by Callwey Publishers, is written by experts including architectural journalists, writers, critics, lecturers and curators.

five copies of Brick'12 to be won

Over 400 colour photographs and building plans illustrate the collection of innovative brick architecture.

five copies of Brick'12 to be won

The second part of the book includes a new magazine, called Brick+, which features current news regarding modern brick architecture.

five copies of Brick'12 to be won

See more on the Wienerberger Brick Awards 2012 here.

five copies of Brick'12 to be won

To enter this competition email your name, age, gender, occupation, and delivery address and telephone number to competitions@dezeen.com with “Brick’12” in the subject line. We won’t pass your information on to anyone else; we just want to know a little about our readers.

Read our privacy policy here.

five copies of Brick'12 to be won

Competition closes 29 May 2012. Five winners will be selected at random and notified by email. Winners’ names will be published in a future edition of our Dezeenmail newsletter and at the top of this page. Dezeen competitions are international and entries are accepted from readers in any country.

Subscribe to our newsletter, get our RSS feed or follow us on Twitter for details of future competitions.

five copies of Brick'12 to be won

Here’s some more information from Wienerbeger:


Wienerberger Brick Award 2012: 240 pages of award-winning architecture

Vienna, 8 May 2012 – On 3 May 2012, Wienerberger presented its international Brick Award by awarding five outstanding brick architecture projects. The accompanying book “Brick’12” features the award-winning buildings as well as the 45 nominated projects from 28 countries and five continents, presented by renowned architecture writers from around the world. The bilingual 240-page book with over 400 colour photographs and building plans is being published by Callwey Publishers and is available in selected bookshops from 15 May 2012.

five copies of Brick'12 to be won

Proven material, visionary architecture

“Brick’12 is the fifth edition of our book series launched in 2004 to coincide with the Wienerberger Brick Award. The publication highlights the innovative use of brick in architecture today,” says Wienerberger CEO Heimo Scheuch.

The articles were written by some 50 of the acknowledged authors and experts in the world of architecture, from architecture journalist Rory Olcayto to book author Falk Jaeger to lecturer and curator of architecture events Rùta Leitanaite. Some authors have contributed to the book series from the beginning and often visit the brick buildings in person in order to get a first-hand look. The Wienerberger Brick Award 2012 was presented in the categories “Special Solution with Brick”, “Single-Family House”, “Non-Residential Building”, “Residential Building” and “Conversion”.

five copies of Brick'12 to be won

Brick+: New magazine supplement with Chipperfield and Jelinek

New this year is the magazine supplement Brick+ which can be found in the second part of the book featuring current developments in modern brick architecture. The architecture magazine reports on the expansion of the Tate Modern in London by Swiss architects Herzog & de Meuron and their use of brick as a construction material. Brick+ also features a profile of architect David Chipperfield, who calls himself a friend of “good old brick” and reveals how he recovers from the stress and strain of the architect’s life in Galicia. A further highlight is an essay by Literature Nobel Laureate Elfriede Jelinek about ceramic artist Kurt Ohnsorg.

Highest quality

“The book is more than a coffee table book of the nominated projects. It is a comprehensive reference work for students, architects and fans of architecture, a must on any well-stocked bookshelf,” says Heimo Scheuch, clearly impressed by the new edition of “Brick’12” accompanying this year’s Wienerberger Brick Award. “Thanks to the untiring dedication, organisation and coordination of the many contributors, we have – in a period of just one year – again published a work that demonstrates the highest level of quality from both a journalistic and a design point of view.”

Swiss daily “Neue Züricher Zeitung” called the first edition a book that demonstrates works which, because of their formal beauty and technical precision, stand out far above the average, everyday architectural product. The German architecture journal “Deutsches Architektenblatt” called the book a feast for the eyes with very lively text. “Brick’12 will meet the previous, positive feedback and will definitely satisfy fans of architecture and critics”, says Heimo Scheuch pleased about the new book.

five copies of Brick'12 to be won

About Wienerberger

With 230 plants in 30 countries, Wienerberger is the world’s largest brick producer and the largest roof tile manufacturer in Europe, as well as market leader in concrete pavers in Central and Eastern Europe. The publicly listed company, founded in Vienna in 1819, employs some 12,000 people worldwide. More information about the Brick Award 2012 is available at http://www.wienerberger.com/brick-award and about the previous awards from 2004, 2006, 2008 and 2010 at www.brick10.com.

Wienerberger Brick Award 2012

Wienerberger Brick Award 2012

Dezeen promotion: Austrian brick manufacturer Wienerberger will reward the most innovative contemporary brick architecture at the fifth biennial Wienerberger Brick Award ceremony in Vienna next month.

Wienerberger Brick Award 2012

A panel of experts will select winners in five categories from a total of 50 projects that have been submitted from around the world.

Top image: 2010 Special Award – Architecture Museum for the Island of Hombroich Foundation, Germany by Álvaro Siza, Rudolf Finsterwalder
Above: 2010 third-placed entry – Morjan-Poeten House, Germany by Nikolaus Bienefeld 

Wienerberger Brick Award 2012

Above: 2010 Grand winner – State Forum and Parliament of the Principality of Liechtenstein, Liechtenstein by Hansjörg Göritz Architecture Studio

The awards promote excellence in buildings constructed using clay products based on criteria including sustainability, energy efficiency, functionality and innovative exterior design.

Wienerberger Brick Award 2012

Above: 2010 Special Award – Public Buildings, Republic of Mali by Emilio Caravatti

An accompanying book, titled “Brick’12” and published by Callwey Publishers, presents the nominated and winning designs alongside text by international architecture writers.

Wienerberger Brick Award 2012

Above: 2010 second placed entry – South Asian Human Rights Documentation Centre, India by Anagram Architects

Find out more about this year’s awards here, click here for a list of all 50 nominees and see images of the winning projects from 2010 here.

Here are some more details about the awards from Wienerberger:


Wienerberger Brick Award 2012: Global market leader presents award-winning brick architecture for the fifth time

Vienna, 29 February 2012 – On 3 May 2012, Wienerberger AG will present its internationally announced Wienerberger Brick Award in Vienna for the fifth consecutive time. With the award, the world’s largest brick producer and the largest roof tile manufacturer in Europe recognises internationally outstanding examples of modern brick architecture in five categories. Selection criteria include the innovative exterior design and skilful use of brick as a material, as well as the functionality, sustainability and energy efficiency of the buildings.

Wienerberger Brick Award 2012

Above: 2012 jury panel. Photography by Christian Dusek.

This year’s winners will be selected by a jury of renowned experts consisting of the architects Plamen Bratkov (Bulgaria), Zhang Lei (China), Hrvoje Hrabak (Croatia), Rudolf Finsterwalder (Germany) and John Foldbjerg Lassen (Denmark) – (image from left to right).

The globally outstanding buildings constructed using clay products were submitted by international architecture critics and architecture journalists. The worldwide research conducted by these “architecture scouts” helps Wienerberger identify brick buildings that leave a lasting impression. Possible applications range from building solutions with classic wall and façade bricks to the creative use of roof tiles and clay pavers. Special attention is paid to how the building blends naturally into the surroundings as well as to the geometry, personality and quality of the building and its lighting conditions.

Wienerberger Brick Award 2012

Above: 2010 second places entry – South Asian Human Rights Documentation Centre, India by Anagram Architects

The prize has been awarded every two years since 2004. The 2012 Gala will take place in Vienna City Hall on 3 May 2012. The Wienerberger Brick Award 2012 is endowed with a total of 27,000 euros in prize money. A total of 50 projects from 28 countries and five continents were nominated for the Wienerberger Brick Award 2012 (see the Wienerberger fact sheet for an overview of the countries).

Wienerberger Brick Award 2012

Above photograph is by Christian Richters.

“With the Wienerberger Brick Award, we want to cast a spotlight on how innovative and versatile brick can be when used as a construction material in architecture today,” says Heimo Scheuch, CEO of Wienerberger AG. “Especially in modern, future-oriented architecture, the choice of material plays an increasingly important role. Brick is not just timeless and innovative, it also is a durable and environmentally-friendly construction material that makes an important contribution to energy-efficient building.”

Wienerberger Brick Award 2012

Above photograph is by Ian Ehm (APA).

For the fifth time, the Wienerberger Brick Award will have an accompanying book, titled “Brick’12” and published by Callwey Publishers, featuring the nominations and award-winning buildings presented by international architectural writers. The second part of the 240-page book includes the new magazine Brick+, in which readers can learn where top architect David Chipperfield goes on holiday, why Literature Nobel Laureate Elfriede Jelinek is crazy about ceramic artist Kurt Ohnsorg, and how a new generation of architects from all over Europe has developed a passion for building with brick. “Brick’12” will go on sale in May 2012 at bookshops in German-speaking countries and will also be available from the Callwey online shop at www.callwey-shop.de/brick-12.html and from other big-name online retailers.

www.wienerberger.com

Old Workshop by Jack Woolley

Slideshow: people strolling by this brick wall in London might miss the disguised entrance to a secret office and home.

Old Workshop by Jack Woolley

The wall appears to merely bridge the gap between two existing properties, but is in fact a screen across the entire facade of a building designed by British architect Jack Woolley.

Old Workshop by Jack Woolley

Located on the site of a former carpenter’s workshop, Old Workshop has two storeys, one of which is completely submerged underground.

Old Workshop by Jack Woolley

An office and meeting room occupy the ground floor level, while the basement contains a residence that is naturally lit through a row of walk-on skylights.

Old Workshop by Jack Woolley

Pine salvaged from the former workshop roof was used to construct cabinets in the kitchen.

Old Workshop by Jack Woolley

If you’re intrigued by secret entrances, check out our story about a disguised passageway concealed behind a mirror.

Old Workshop by Jack Woolley

Photography is by David Grandorge, apart from where otherwise stated.

Old Workshop by Jack Woolley

The text below is from Jack Woolley:


Old Workshop

A project to rehabilitate a derelict carpenter’s workshop which had been used to make walking sticks by doubling its size and converting it to live/work.

Old Workshop by Jack Woolley

The original workshop was built behind a London stock brick wall that linked the neighbouring terraces.

Old Workshop by Jack Woolley

This wall and the gap above it that framed a landscape of tree canopies were important to the integrity of the streetscape and a decision was taken to preserve them.

Old Workshop by Jack Woolley

This led to a bespoke door design piercing the wall to form a new entrance – integrated into the brickwork but visible only as a rectangular witness line.

Old Workshop by Jack Woolley

To increase the habitable volume, a new basement level with generous ceiling heights was inserted under the original, but offset horizontally to allow daylight to penetrate through walk on roof lights running along its length.

Old Workshop by Jack Woolley

Materials salvaged from the derelict structure were used to restore the original building with small interventions to accommodate changed requirements of day lighting, thermal efficiency and circulation.

Old Workshop by Jack Woolley

Where possible finishes were integrated into the structure – for example, the floor screed was polished, eliminating the need for a secondary finish.

Old Workshop by Jack Woolley

Pitch pine boards salvaged from the roof were dried out, lightly planed and used to make kitchen units.

Old Workshop by Jack Woolley

To extend the useful life of the building, it had to function in a variety of live:work usage ratios as needs changed.

Old Workshop by Jack Woolley

The way the spaces could be used was planned and services were provided to enable different combinations to be adopted easily.

Old Workshop by Jack Woolley

Architect: Jack Woolley
Structural Engineer: C&R Design

Old Workshop by Jack Woolley

Site address: Old Workshop, Almorah Road, London N1 3EN
Timetable: riba stages a-d 12/08 – 05/09, riba stages e-h 05/09 – 02/10, riba stages j-k 03/10 – 06/11

Old Workshop by Jack Woolley

Duikklok by Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten

Duikklok by Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten

Huge window bays project from the fat cylindrical volume of this apartment block in Tilburg, the Netherlands, by Dutch architects Bedaux de Brouwer.

Duikklok by Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten

Two apartments are contained inside the five-storey building, named Project Duikklok, which has an exterior of dark glazed bricks.

Duikklok by Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten

Spiral stairs connect both two-storey apartments with a shared lobby and garage on the ground floor, while each apartment has its own internal staircase.

Duikklok by Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten

Residents in the uppermost floors have access to a terrace on the roof.

Duikklok by Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten

Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten also recently completed a grey brick house with a shallow moat – see it here.

Duikklok by Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten

Photography is by Tim van de Velde.

Duikklok by Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten

Here’s some more explanation from Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten:


Duikklok

First half of 2011 an urban pavilion by Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten has arisen in the Primus van Gils Park in Tilburg.

Duikklok by Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten

Until now, this area in the city center had been characterized by an exceedingly patched up urban condition.

Duikklok by Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten

This pavilion by Jacq. de Brouwer intends to reconcile its parts.

Duikklok by Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten

Standing firmly in the middle of the park and being clearly visible from all angles the pavilion’s key ambition is to become a spatial conductor.

Duikklok by Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten

Dynamic connections to the surrounding greenery and the cityscape are forged.

Duikklok by Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten

Two apartments stacked on top of a shared entrance level make up a circular-shaped five level structure.

Duikklok by Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten

Rooms of both apartments that require privacy are grouped together on the third and fourth level.

Duikklok by Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten

The rooms are made introvert and are kept within the core.

Duikklok by Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten

The second and fifth level contain outward looking spaces.

Duikklok by Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten

Large sweeping window bays provide maximum panoramic views and have the advantage of allowing the use of large sliding window panes that open up the façade.

Duikklok by Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten

The window bays spiral upwards as if to actively search for optimum orientation.

Duikklok by Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten

Privacy and engagement are caught in a whimsical display of twisting and turning. Like a combination lock the bays latch into their final position.

Duikklok by Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten

By rendering the whole building in a dark glazed brick the impression of an amassing edifice is amplified. The suggestive weight grants the sweeping gestures tectonic forcefulness.

Duikklok by Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten

A distinctive brick-laying technique of recessed bed joints and omitted head joints makes the masonry at times appear almost like textile.

In its staged setting, this pavilion will be continuously at play to attune the space of the city.

Duikklok by Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten

Name: Duikklok
Address: Bisschop Zwijsenstraat 62, 5038 VB
Client: Interfour B.V., Berkel-Enschot

Design: Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten
Project-architect: Jacq. de Brouwer
Team member: Ingeborg Dankers
Structural advisor: Adviesbureau S. v. Boxtel – Tilburg
Contractor: Aannemersbedrijf Riebouw B.V.
Gross floorspace: 576m2
Gross Volume: 1853m3

Start construction: March 2010
Completion: March 2011

Lego Office

Rosan Bosch a pu penser le design des bureaux de la marque de jouets “Lego”. Situés à Billund au Danemark, les locaux du géant du jouet allient à la perfection ambiance calme et détente pour permettre aux employés de se sentir à l’aise. Plus d’images dans la suite.



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Dezeen Screen: Flight Assembled Architecture

Dezeen Screen: Flight Assembled Architecture

Dezeen Screen: in this movie filmed at the FRAC Centre in Orléans, flying robots created by Swiss architects Gramazio & Kohler and Raffaello D’Andrea assemble a six metre-high tower from polystyrene bricks. Watch the movie »

Flight Assembled Architecture by Gramazio & Kohler and Raffaello d’Andrea

Flight Assembled Architecture by Gramazio & Kohler and Raffaello d'Andrea

Flying robots will assemble a six metre-high tower at the FRAC Centre in Orléans, France, next month.

Flight Assembled Architecture by Gramazio & Kohler and Raffaello d'Andrea

Created by Swiss architects Gramazio & Kohler and Raffaello D’Andrea, the mobile machines will lift, transport and assemble 1500 polystyrene foam bricks to build a 3.5 metre wide structure.

Flight Assembled Architecture by Gramazio & Kohler and Raffaello d'Andrea

The installation will be on show from 2 December 2011 to 19 February 2012.

Flight Assembled Architecture by Gramazio & Kohler and Raffaello d'Andrea

Gramazio & Kohler previously used a robot called R-O-B to build a looping wall in New York and the award-winning Structural Oscillations installation at the 2008 Venice Architecture Biennale – more details and photos in our earlier story.

Flight Assembled Architecture by Gramazio & Kohler and Raffaello d'Andrea

You can see all our stories about robots on Dezeen here.

Here are some more details from the architects:


From December 2, 2011, to February 19, 2012, the FRAC Centre presents Gramazio & Kohler and Raffaello d’Andrea, Flight Assembled Architecture, the first installation to be built by flying machines.

In 2011, Gramazio & Kohler and Raffaello D’Andrea started to develop a pioneering approach on dynamic material formation and machine behaviour.

Belonging to the generation of young architects aiming at using the full potential of digital design and fabrication, Gramazio & Kohler joined with Raffaello D’Andrea whose work addresses ground-breaking autonomous systems design and algorithms.

Together, they started to explore the possibilities of a revolutionary assembly apparatus and reveal with their collaboration unseen spatial and structural articulations based on the innovation of Flight Assembled Architecture.

Conceived as an architectural structure at a scale of a 600 m high “vertical village”, the installation addresses radical new ways of thinking and materializing architecture as a physical process of dynamic formation.

Gramazio & Kohler and Raffaello D’Andrea developed a powerful expression of cutting-edge innovation that uses a multitude of mobile agents working in parallel and acting together as scalable production means.

Those are programmed to interact, lift, transport and assemble small modules in order to erect a building structure that synthesizes a rigorous architectural approach by Gramazio & Kohler and a visionary autonomous system design by Raffaello D’Andrea.

The FRAC Centre chose to associate with their approach. The aim was to initiate a unique installation and be able to include the result in its collection of experimental architecture.

Moreover, this is the first collaborative project by Gramazio & Kohler and Raffaello D’Andrea and will be exclusively exhibited at the FRAC Centre, Orléans.

Following an initial phase lasting several days and dedicated to the assembly by flying machines of a model standing 6 m high and 3,5 m in diameter– made up of 1500 prefabricated polystyrene foam modules –,
the exhibition will feature a “megastructure” in its completed form, along with a film documenting the airborne assembly and all aspects of the exhibition.

Additional lecture by Gramazio & Kohler on their architectural works, organized by the Centre culturel suisse in collaboration with the Centre Pompidou in Paris. Centre Pompidou, December 2, 2011, 7 pm.

An exhibition catalogue (English/French bilingual), Flight Assembled Architecture by Gramazio & Kohler and Raffaello D’Andrea, FRAC Centre coll., will be published by HYX, Orléans in February 2012.

Aesop Ginza by Schemata Architecture Office

Aesop Ginza by Schemata Architecture Office

Japanese architect Jo Nagasaka of Schemata Architecture Office has completed another Tokyo store for skincare brand Aesop, this time in an old shoe shop.

Aesop Ginza by Schemata Architecture Office

Aesop Ginza has a red brick interior, which references the brick-tiled facade that was previously painted over by the upstairs tenants.

Aesop Ginza by Schemata Architecture Office

Brick courses infill the spaces between wooden shelves where products are displayed, while brick units with wooden surfaces house sinks.

Aesop Ginza by Schemata Architecture Office

You can see more Aesop stores here, including the other Tokyo store by Jo Nagasaka made from materials of a demolished house and a kiosk in New York made of 1000 newspapers.

Aesop Ginza by Schemata Architecture Office

Other projects by Schemata Architecture Office include an office with a slide and a house in a three metre cube – see all the projects here.

Aesop Ginza by Schemata Architecture Office

Photography is by Alessio Guarino.

Here’s a few sentences from Jo Nagasaka:


We renovated the 35 year shoe shop “Milano Shoes” into new Aesop Shop in Ginza.

Aesop Ginza by Schemata Architecture Office

The owner of MIlano Shoes put the brick tiles on the facade of the shop to create a “high-quality mood.”.

Aesop Ginza by Schemata Architecture Office

But when other tenats of upstair moved into the space they hate the bricks and painted them. Then we designed brick interior in honor of “Milano Shoes”.

Aesop Ginza by Schemata Architecture Office

Address: Ginza, Chuoku, Tokyo
Usage: Shop
Structure: Steel construction
Completion: 09/2011
Floor space: 38.04m2
Construction: Zest

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

Argentine architects Estudio BaBO have stacked one brick box upon another to create this house next to a golf course in Buenos Aires.

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

Brick walls with square openings project out from the building at ground floor level, partially screening outdoor areas.

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

Bedrooms and bathrooms occupy an L-shaped floor-plate on the first floor, enabling ground floor living areas to be double-height.

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

The clay brick used is sourced from nearby town Chacabuco.

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

More stories about houses on Dezeen »
More projects in Argentina on Dezeen »

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

The following is from the architects:


MYP House

The project consists of a single family suburban house placed within a corner plot in a traditional Country Club in the Pilar area, Buenos Aires, Argentina. With a surface area of 1100m², the site forms part of a new extension of the Club, resulting in an almost inexistent urban context, deprived of both neighboring houses and grown vegetation.

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

The only significant influence surrounding the plot is the adjacent par three golf course. The plot is completely flat and there is no physical limit between the golf course and its northeastern border, resulting in a magnificent view which also coincides with the best sun orientation.

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

The internal regulation of the Country Club, including a strict limitation to the buildable area and its limits regarding the neighboring buildings, generates a very large urban sprawl with lots of space between houses.

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

This results in large green open spaces, enabling you to connect with the natural surroundings, a characteristic not common in other suburban developments such as this one. On the other hand; these same characteristics, combined with the client’s desire to use the maximum area allowed, often result in a very compact rectangular volume, sometimes dull and devoid of expression.

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

This is the main reason why most of the houses in this neighborhood tend to concentrate on the outer spaces (so common in this type of climate) by using lightweight structures attached to the main volume, thus compromising their own formal logic.

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

These strong factors, existent in most of the houses within this area, are taken as the principal ideas for our project. We choose to exteriorize the volume, instead of hiding it, exploiting all of its possibilities. We first, expose it, and then apply different articulation mechanisms to create a variation of spatial relations between the different factors present in the projects program.

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

We slice the volume horizontally dividing the daily functions from the private ones. Then we cut, rotate and translate the lower walls so as to gain contact with the exterior at ground level, without giving away the required privacy.

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

One of these articulations creates an entrance courtyard towards the western corner. Its perimeter walls provide privacy, protect the interiors from the harsh western sun, and extend inwards generating a programmatic and symbolic promenade.

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

The other articulations protect the main and exterior areas from the surrounding street and provide room for an outer kitchen and a service patio for the basement.

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

The program for this house is that of any other of its type, it is the treatment of the limits between each space which adds complexity to the final plan. It was established from the first moment the importance to make a separation between day and night activities.

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

The ground floor plan is dedicated to daytime activities. Its plan is open so as to connect with its exterior surroundings, at the same time a conscious effort is made to conserve the privacy of its inhabitants and also retain the buildings domestic scale. There is a fluid connection between its spatial units, the kitchen and the guest toilet (being the only closable rooms).

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

An open staircase dividing the living and dining room, has a balustrade made up of thin metal bars which seemingly open up as the observer moves around its lower space; a piece of furniture specifically placed at a change of floor level also allows for a one-way visual connection to be made between the two spaces. These are some of the strategies implemented to induce a playful separation between spaces.

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

The outdoor terrace is integrated as a special unit within itself, with the same length, width and double height of the living area, this important feature becomes the most utilized space in the house. Large retractable glass doors separating this area from the living room allow for the two spaces to be unified and promote use throughout most of the year.

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

Click above for larger image

The outward projection of the lower brick walls, together with its rectangular openings, guarantees privacy while generating ambiguous limits. This insinuates a fluid succession between interior and exterior.

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

Click above for larger image

Apart from the visual connection between the linear hallway and the living area (in double height) the first floor plan is formed by a simple succession of bedrooms and bathrooms.

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

Click above for larger image

All of the rooms extend themselves to the exterior through big glass openings, each room towards a different site. It is intended to individualize the bedrooms by providing them with a different scene and light quality. This also generates the increase of mass in all of the upper floor facades, giving the house its monolithic character.

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

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Natural light has been essential in this project. The ground floor plan has been designed so as to avoid direct sunlight. The indirect light provides the rooms with a very particular quality, uniform and constant throughout the day. Together with the double height ceilings and cross ventilation the necessity of using a mechanical cooling system can be avoided.

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

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With regards to the materiality of the project, the decision was made to repeat the use of the Chacabuco brick, seen in the club house and its surrounding buildings, to create a dialogue between the project and its environment.

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

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The module of the brick is present in the project both in the general proportions of the top volume and as the direct articulator of the relationship between mass and void. On the main level, clear granite is chosen for both interior and exterior floors and a plaster finishing is used on the interior walls throughout the house. Wood is present in the two leveled ceilings of the gallery. All windows are in an anodized black, a colour shared with the exterior wall surrounding the kitchen.

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

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The project aims to represent a synthesis of its contextual conditions. On the one hand, the already limited constraints of an isolated single family house with its requirements, such as connections, privacy and security in this non-permeable area. And on the other hand, the acceptance of the existing constructive pressures as an enabling and legitimizing design strategy.

MYP House by Estudio BaBO

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Type / Single family suburban house
Architecture / Estudio BaBO
Team / Francisco Kocourek, Francesc Planas Penadés, Marit Haugen Stabell
Collaborators / Marcos Buceta, Eva Aagard
Construction / DAC. S.A.
Structure / Eduardo Diner Civil Engineer
Location / Pilar, Buenos Aires, Argentina
Plot Area / 1100m2
Built Area / 330m2
Project Year / 2008
Construction Year / 07/2008 – 01/2010
Photographs / Daniela Mac Aden, Federico Kulekdjian


See also:

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House in Buenos Aires
by Guillermo Radovich
Port Fairy House 2
by Farnan Findlay
Charrat Transformation
by clavienrossier