House Between Two Yards by Pitsou Kedem

Double-height glass doors slide back to open up an entire facade of this house in Israel by architect Pitsou Kedem (+ slideshow).

House Between Two Yards by Pitsou Kedem

Israel-based Pitsou Kedem placed the open-plan lounge, dining areas and kitchen between two outdoor spaces so they would receive light from both east and west.

House Between Two Yards by Pitsou Kedem

“This provides a feeling that the space is constantly enveloped by natural light and the greenery of the trees in the courtyard,” said the architect.

House Between Two Yards by Pitsou Kedem

The six-metre-high living area is fronted with giant sheets of glass, which slide open on an electric motor to connect the inside to an expansive terrace.

House Between Two Yards by Pitsou Kedem

From the end of the back garden, a long thin infinity pool looks like it extends into the house.

House Between Two Yards by Pitsou Kedem

A courtyard at the front of the property is sunk to the basement level, with terraced planters stepping down to the excavated area from the boundary wall.

House Between Two Yards by Pitsou Kedem

Floating steps lead up from the front gate to a bridge, which connects to the entrance in the three-storey volume parallel to the street.

House Between Two Yards by Pitsou Kedem

The home comprises two perpendicular intersecting volumes and the smaller cuboid housing the bedrooms protrudes into the kitchen space, next to the swivelling front door.

House Between Two Yards by Pitsou Kedem

Staircases on the other side go down to the children’s living room and up to a mezzanine balcony.

House Between Two Yards by Pitsou Kedem

Apart from heavy concrete and white rendered end walls, all rooms are glazed from floor to ceiling but can be veiled with white curtains. Shutters roll down in front of the huge glass wall for privacy and security.

House Between Two Yards by Pitsou Kedem

Pitsou Kedem’s other projects include a family house with timber screens that fold back in all different directions and a furniture showroom inside an industrial warehouse.

House Between Two Yards by Pitsou Kedem

See more residential architecture »
See more architecture by Pitsou Kedem »
See more architecture and design in Israel »

Photography is by Amit Geron.

Read on for more information from the architects:


Between two courtyards

A private residence, built between two, central courtyards.

House Between Two Yards by Pitsou Kedem

A frontal courtyard excavated to a depth of three meters and the second courtyard at the level of the building’s ground floor.

House Between Two Yards by Pitsou Kedem

This topographical interface creates a unique cross section to the building’s mass with each part of the building, even the section constructed as a basement, being open to its own courtyard.

House Between Two Yards by Pitsou Kedem

The central space of the kitchen, the dining room and the living room is open in two directions – to the west and to the east. This provides a feeling that the space is constantly enveloped by natural light and the greenery of the trees in the courtyard.

House Between Two Yards by Pitsou Kedem

The structure’s central space, set in the centre of the plot, is accessed via a long bridge that crosses the sunken courtyard and leads to the front door.

House Between Two Yards by Pitsou Kedem

From the bridge, we can see the children’s living rooms which open into the basement.

House Between Two Yards by Pitsou Kedem

The house’s central space rises to a height of six meters and is 17 metres long.

House Between Two Yards by Pitsou Kedem

There are no pillars in the space and the entire front is transparent with glass windows that slide apart with the aid of an electric motor.

House Between Two Yards by Pitsou Kedem

Thus, the entire interior of the home opens into the courtyard and the border between inside and outside is cancelled.

House Between Two Yards by Pitsou Kedem

The swimming pool seems as if it extends into the structure and, when looking into the house from the courtyard, the house in reflected in the pool which strengthens our impression of the building’s mass.

House Between Two Yards by Pitsou Kedem
Ground floor plan – click for larger image

The master bedroom is set on the second floor and opens onto the double space and the courtyard allowing for a view of the entire plot.

House Between Two Yards by Pitsou Kedem
Long section – click for larger image

The structures two supporting side walls have been emphasised, one was poured from exposed, architectural concrete and on the other a large library reaches to its full height.

Architecture: Pitsou Kedem Architects
Design team: Pitsou Kedem, Nurit Ben Yosef

The post House Between Two Yards
by Pitsou Kedem
appeared first on Dezeen.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Perforated metal screens conceal rooms and storage space in this Tel Aviv apartment by Israeli studio Paritzki & Liani Architects (+ slideshow).

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Paritzki & Liani Architects lined two walls of the 110-square-metre flat with hinged translucent panels to hide away everything except the kitchen counter and a sofa.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

“The idea was to thicken the existing walls with vertical perforated metal panels that may be opened and closed, forming a thick wall that contains functions of the habitat,” said the architects.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

The walls open up to reveal kitchen units, the master bedroom and bathroom on one side of the main living space, and shelving along the other.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

These spaces remain obscured until lights within are switched on and the glow emanates through the panels.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Larger windows are left unmasked, but smaller ones are consumed by the screens or covered with similar translucent blinds.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Doorways and corridors leading from the entrance and into the bedroom are lined with the same wood as the floor.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Positioned in front of the bedroom, the bathroom sits right up against the panels but is still separated from the living area by large sheets of glass.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Elliptical lights suspended at different heights look like hovering UFOs and are reflected in the shiny ceiling.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

A walk-in wardrobe is located completely out of view behind the kitchen and an L-shaped balcony faces west to look out over the city’s skyline.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Also in Tel Aviv, Paritzki & Liani have squeezed a house with an exposed brickwork interior into a space between two existing properties and installed a PVC ceiling at an apartment to mirror a panoramic view of the harbour.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Photography by Amit Geron.

See more apartment interiors »
See more projects by Paritzki & Liani Architects »
See more architecture and design in Israel »

The architects’ project description follows:


In an anonymous high-rise building, among many of those surrounding our skyline; we’ve decided to use the interior of this 110 sqm flat to elaborate, with simple elements, walls and lights, an experiment on the nature of perception.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

The idea here is to thicken the existing walls with vertical perforated metal panels that may be open and closed; forming this way a thick wall that contains functions of the habitat (kitchen, closets, library, bathroom, storage). Above all, this wall is an optical device that transforms, depending on the type of light used, and modifies the height and depth of the space. In the light of day this thick perforated wall, composed of variable thicknesses, becomes a three dimensional veil that makes opalescent the different areas of the flat. Niches and deep spaces create visions of transitional forms.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects
Floor plan – click for larger image and key

In the dark we’ve drawn attention to a ritual passage, familiar to all of us, once we enter our home at night; the passage from darkness to illuminated space. Here we create a second view to the inhabitants. Our device adds new parts to the space, transforming itself into a remote architecture with new and profound windows: the vision exceeds the measurable borders of the flat.

The appearance of this new place vanishes once the lights are turned off.

The post O Apartment by
Paritzki & Liani Architects
appeared first on Dezeen.

An Urban Villa by Pitsou Kedem

Israeli architect Pitsou Kedem has renovated a 1950s house in Tel Aviv with a roughly hewn sandstone mosaic wall inside it (+ slideshow).

An Urban Villa by Pitsou Kedem Architects

An Urban Villa was designed by Dov Karmi, one of Israel’s most celebrated modern architects, and Pitsou Kedem was asked to restructure the two-storey interior.

An Urban Villa by Pitsou Kedem Architects

“The main idea was to preserve the spirit of the original design whilst implementing a contemporary, independent interpretation of the existing structure and its adaptation to contemporary technologies, materials and knowledge,” said Kedem.

An Urban Villa by Pitsou Kedem Architects

Walls were whitened both inside and outside the house, while black-painted wood was used to construct the new staircase and louvred balustrade.

An Urban Villa by Pitsou Kedem Architects

“These monochromatic hues provide the background for the original materials that we decided to preserve,” explained Kedem, referring to the limestone floor and sandstone wall left intact.

An Urban Villa by Pitsou Kedem Architects

The architect selected furniture to complement the design, including an Eames chair, a marble kitchen counter and a vivid red sofa.

An Urban Villa by Pitsou Kedem Architects

Other residential projects by Pitsou Kedem include a renovated apartment with a vaulted stone ceiling and a boxy white house. See more architecture by Pitsou Kedem »

An Urban Villa by Pitsou Kedem Architects

Here’s more text from the architect:


An Urban Villa

In the 1950s what was known as the “International Style” was highly developed in Tel Aviv. It developed thanks to architects who studied at the Bauhaus Institute in Germany and who then returned to Israel to continue their work. One of the architects who led the “International Style” was Dov Carmi. He designed many, usually large, projects. One of his more restrained projects was an urban villa in the centre of Tel Aviv which he designed in 1951.

An Urban Villa by Pitsou Kedem Architects

In his design, Carmi expressed his local interpretation of “Free Design” in which there is a continuous series of spaces created by light and shadow, view and movement without creating one large, single and open space.

An Urban Villa by Pitsou Kedem Architects

My office executed a massive reconstruction of the structure which included the changing of the exterior facade and the division of the interior. The main idea was to preserve the spirit of the original design whilst implementing a contemporary, independent interpretation of the existing structure and its adaptation to contemporary technologies, materials and knowledge.

An Urban Villa by Pitsou Kedem Architects

During the project, we took great care to create an experience of defined, intimate and continuous spaces in a relatively restricted area; and this without detracting from the overall understanding of the entire structure.

An Urban Villa by Pitsou Kedem Architects

The house is simple and minimalistic with the light and the materials creating drama and vitality. The unique range of materials was preserved throughout the project.

An Urban Villa by Pitsou Kedem Architects

The building’s external facades were painted white and the profiles chosen are decks painted black, similar to the Bauhaus style. The floor is of off-white concrete. These monochromatic hues provide the background for the original materials that we decided to preserve.

An Urban Villa by Pitsou Kedem Architects

The central wall that divides the entry space was preserved in its original form, built from hewed, course sandstone constructed in a unique composition. The floor of the living room is wild, natural limestone of earth hues and changing sections. The wall and the floor symbolise the building in its original state. Around them is modern, minimalistic architecture which emphasis the space and the light. The project’s furniture was carefully chosen to complete the overall experience of a living urban villa that conducts a dialogue between two worlds and two separate eras.

An Urban Villa by Pitsou Kedem Architects

Plot: 370 sqm
House: 300 sqm
Original structure’s architect: Dov Carmi, 1951
Renovation architect: Pitsou Kedem Architects 2010 – 2012
Design team: Pitsou Kedem, Noa Groman

The post An Urban Villa
by Pitsou Kedem
appeared first on Dezeen.

SANAA plans new campus for Bezalel Academy of Art and Design

News: Japanese studio SANAA has presented designs for a new campus for Israel’s leading design school within Jerusalem’s historic Russian Compound.

Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design by SANAA

Scheduled for completion in 2017, the new 37,000 square-metre campus for the Bezalel Academy of Art and Design will be constructed in one of Jerusalem’s oldest districts, between the Holy Trinity Cathedral and the Museum of Underground Prisoners.

Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design by SANAA

Architects Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa of SANAA are working alongside local firm Nir-Kutz Architects on the design of the building, which is intended to encourage collaboration between the eight traditionally separate departments of the school.

Bezalel New Campus by SANAA

Classrooms and studios will be arranged over a series of staggered horizontal slabs that correspond with the site’s natural topography. Numerous ramps and staircases will connect the split levels, while voids in the floorplates will create balconies between floors and increase natural light.

Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design by SANAA

The plans also include a pair of auditoriums, public exhibition galleries and cafes for both students and visitors.

Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design by SANAA

Construction is expected to commence at the end of next year, made possible by a $25 million donation from the Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel Foundation.

Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design by SANAA
Site plan – click for larger image

Sejima and Nishizawa, who were awarded the Pritzker Architecture Prize in 2010, have also recently completed a circular production hall at the Vitra Campus in Germany and a sister gallery to the Musée du Louvre in France.

See more architecture by SANAA »
See more architecture in Israel »

Here’s a project description from the design team:


The site of the new campus for the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design is located on the top of a hill in the Russian Compound, overlooking the old city of Jerusalem. The Academy includes several departments comprised of studios, classrooms, workshops and administration offices and of public areas such as exhibition galleries, a store, a café and a cafeteria.

The building is composed of slabs. The slabs are stacked following the natural gradient of the landscape, and all are at different levels. Throughout both the exterior and the interior of the building, the slabs are connected through ramps and stairs so that it is possible to walk freely from one to the other, moving horizontally and vertically.

On the exterior, the slabs connect to form a terraced roof overlooking the city. On the interior, the slabs are detached from one another to create vertical void spaces throughout the building. The void spaces allow visual connection between different parts of the program that are hosted on each slab. As a consequence, each part of the building maintains its independence, but at the same time is fully connected with all other parts. Because of the layout of the slabs, natural light can filter freely through the building both from above and from the sides, penetrating also in those spaces that sit in the middle of the largest footprint areas.

The scale of the building is determined by its context and by its program. The volume is composed to fit properly within the city of Jerusalem and, at the same time, accommodate the spaces necessary for students and faculty of the Academy to work comfortably. The building also fits into the natural context as it mimics the terraced landscape, and resonates with its colour and texture.

The post SANAA plans new campus for
Bezalel Academy of Art and Design
appeared first on Dezeen.

Herzog & de Meuron wins second competition for National Library of Israel

Herzog & de Meuron

News: Herzog & de Meuron has been chosen to design the new National Library of Israel in Jerusalem after the initial competition winner was dismissed over a copyright dispute.

The Swiss firm won out against international architects Frank Gehry and Renzo Piano along with three Israeli architects – Kolker Kolker Epstein, Kimmel Eshkolot and Dina Amar and Avraham Korial.

Entrants to the relaunched competition were not asked to submit detailed plans for the building but instead underwent an interview with the competition jury. No images of the winning project are available yet.

Herzog & de Meuron’s appointment comes just four months after Israeli architect Rafi Segal was ousted from the job when one of his former colleagues at the Harvard School of Design challenged his ownership of the winning design.

Bing Wang said she and her company, HyperBina, had worked on Segal’s entry and should have been credited for their role when the announcement of the winner was made in September 2012.

Segal, who has has launched a legal challenge against the project backers’ decision in the the hope of being reinstated, said he had intended to name the full design team as soon as he had permission to publicise his win. A Jerusalem court is due to consider Segal’s claim on 8 May.

Construction recently started on two Herzog & de Meuron-designed projects in Europe – a football stadium in Bordeaux, France, and an outdoor bathing lake in Riehen, Switzerland. See all architecture by Herzog & de Meuron.

Other libraries we’ve reported on lately include Snøhetta’s completed a library at North Carolina State University featuring a robotic book retrieval system and a 3D printing workshop, while a library dedicated to design has recently opened in Seoul, South Korea. See all libraries.

The post Herzog & de Meuron wins second competition
for National Library of Israel
appeared first on Dezeen.

Kfar Shmaryahu House by Pitsou Kedem

Windows are hidden behind timber screens that fold back in all different directions at this family house in Israel by architect Pitsou Kedem (+ slideshow).

Kfar Shmaryahu House by Pitsou Kedem

The louvred panels fold around two of the house’s elevations and sit flush with the white-rendered walls to create a completely flat facade. They screen every window to moderate light and privacy levels inside the house.

Kfar Shmaryahu House by Pitsou Kedem

Each screen is mounted to either a hinge or a pivot on the side or on the top, forming a mixture of doors and canopies. They can be opened in any combination to open or close different rooms out to the garden.

Kfar Shmaryahu House by Pitsou Kedem

“We can achieve a composition that is balanced, dynamic, haphazard, closed or open within the same framework,” explain the design team.

Kfar Shmaryahu House by Pitsou Kedem

Pitsou Kedem designed the two-storey house for a family living in Kfar Shmaryahu, Israel.

Kfar Shmaryahu House by Pitsou Kedem

Behind the timber screens, the house contains an open-plan living room, dining room and kitchen that wrap around a staircase at the rear. Four bedrooms occupy the floor above.

Kfar Shmaryahu House by Pitsou Kedem

The rear elevation is fully glazed and recessed, creating a sheltered first-floor balcony and a ground-floor terrace below.

Kfar Shmaryahu House by Pitsou Kedem

Pitsou Kedem’s studio is based in Tel Aviv. Past projects include a furniture showroom for B&B Italia and a refurbished apartment with a vaulted stone ceiling. See more architecture by Pitsou Kedem.

Kfar Shmaryahu House by Pitsou Kedem

See more architecture and interiors in Israel, including a house with two matching concrete blocks.

Kfar Shmaryahu House by Pitsou Kedem

Photography is by Amit Geron.

Kfar Shmaryahu House by Pitsou Kedem

Here’s a project description from Pitsou Kedem:


The arrangement of objects in a given space or a defined format in order to give meaning to the placement and arrangement of the items, the result of the relationship between the object and the framework of the artistic creation.

Kfar Shmaryahu House by Pitsou Kedem

A private, family residence in an urban environment. From without, the building does not reveal that it is a home. It resembles a mold or an artist’s canvas or an almost two dimensional frame within whose area various openings have been placed and which are enveloped with a dynamic system of wooden, linear strips.

Kfar Shmaryahu House by Pitsou Kedem

The planar distribution of the “picture” or, in this case the front façade, creates a non-symmetrical composition which pulls towards the flanking faces in an attempt to suggest that this is, in fact, a three dimensional mass. The arrangement of the objects (the openings) is always fixed and allows for one central and permanent composition.

Kfar Shmaryahu House by Pitsou Kedem

The ability to reverse the balanced composition into a dynamic one is made possible thanks to the design of a system of smart blinds that allows the blinds to be lifted upwards whilst they are folded into what resembles a roof. All the rails and fixtures are hidden and so, when the façade is closed the dynamic and changing possibilities hidden in the residence’s façade are not apparent.

Kfar Shmaryahu House by Pitsou Kedem

All the openings open separately and so allow for different compositions. At any given moment and for whatever reason (privacy, protection from the sun) the relationship between the object and the plane can be changed. Thus we can achieve a composition that is balanced, dynamic, haphazard, closed or open within the same framework.

Kfar Shmaryahu House by Pitsou Kedem

Movement through the house is accompanied (thanks to the flexible blind system) by different views of the outside, some exposed and bare, others undisguised and others framing a section of landscape especially designed for it. This selfsame changeability and flexibility also allows control of the amount of sunlight and natural light entering through the openings and into the homes spaces. These spaces are characterized by a restrained use of materials and form so that the light penetrating the space creates a sense of drama, movement and dynamism which seems to breathe life into the souls of the silent walls.

Kfar Shmaryahu House by Pitsou Kedem

Thus, in effect, the system of relationships between the street and the structure composed of changing, but two dimensional compositions on a framed and flat plane develops, for the user of the house’s spaces, an open area that incorporates abstract or tangible images with volume.

Kfar Shmaryahu House by Pitsou Kedem

The relationship between these same volumes (the walls, the stairs, the various partitions and the different elements in the house) and the space, create, through the structures changing façade and the dynamism of the blinds, changing compositions, sometimes controlled and sometimes random with a new and different experience being created each time for the user and those living in the home.

Kfar Shmaryahu House by Pitsou Kedem

Above: site plan – click for larger image

Design: Pitsou Kedem
Design team architects: Pitsou Kedem, Irene Goldberg, Raz Melmaed
Project: Private home
Plot size: 1500 square meters. Built-up area: 600 square meters

Kfar Shmaryahu House by Pitsou Kedem

 Above: ground floor plan

Kfar Shmaryahu House by Pitsou Kedem

Above: first floor plan

Kfar Shmaryahu House by Pitsou Kedem

Above: section

The post Kfar Shmaryahu House
by Pitsou Kedem
appeared first on Dezeen.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Google’s new Tel Aviv headquarters include a meeting area filled with orange trees, workstations on a make-believe beach and slides connecting different floors (+ slideshow).

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Swiss designers Camenzind Evolution completed the project in collaboration with Israeli studios Studio Yaron Tal and Setter Architects.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

The offices occupy seven floors of the Electra Tower, one of the tallest skyscrapers in the Israeli city, and were designed as a series of informal workspaces intended to encourage communication and collaboration.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Every area is themed, but each one is based on a scene found somewhere in Israel. Some of the corridors appear as narrow cobbled streets, complete with arched windows and flower boxes, while the reception area is an undulating timber landscape reminiscent of the public spaces at Tel Aviv’s port.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Fake grass covers the floor and seating in one room. Another contains surfboards that reference the city’s growing surfer culture.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

“Each floor was designed with a different aspect of the local identity in mind, illustrating the diversity of Israel as a country and nation,” say the designers.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Other unusual spaces include a meeting area surrounded by climbing plants, rooms resembling converted warehouses and space modelled on a desert landscape.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

One floor is assigned as a Google Campus, a shared workplace for startup technology companies modelled on one that opened last year in London.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Google frequently works with designers to develop wacky concepts for its offices and the latest London headquarters includes Union Jack flags and vegetable allotments. The internet company also recently revealed images of its data centres, which feature primary-coloured pipework and cooling rooms that glow green. See more stories about Google.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Other offices designed for well-known technology firms include a campus for Adobe in Utah and offices for Microsoft in Vienna, which also include a slide. See more stories about technology companies or see more stories about buildings with slides.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Photography is by Itay Sikolski.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Here’s some more information from Camenzind Evolution:


Amazingly inspiring new work environment for Google in Tel Aviv

At the end of December 2012, Google Israel has opened its spectacular new 8’000 m2 offices in Tel Aviv for their ever growing teams of engineers, sales and marketing.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Designed by Swiss Design Team Camenzind Evolution, in collaboration with Israeli Design Teams Setter Architects and Studio Yaron Tal, the new Google office now occupies 8 floors in the prestigious Electra Tower in Central Tel Aviv, with breath taking views across the whole city and the sea.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

It is a new milestone for Google in the development of innovative work environments: nearly 50% of all areas have been allocated to create communication landscapes, giving countless opportunities to employees to collaborate and communicate with other Googler’s in a diverse environment that will serve all different requirements and needs.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

There is clear separation between the employees traditional desk based work environment and those communication areas, granting privacy and focus when required for desk based individual working and spaces for collaboration and sharing ideas.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Each floor was designed with a different aspect of the local identity in mind, illustrating the diversity of Israel as a country and nation. Each of the themes were selected by a local group of Googlers, who also assisted in the interpretation of those chosen ideas.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Being in Israel, for lunch the Googlers can choose from three amazing restaurants, non-kosher, kosher dairy and kosher meat, each of the restaurants designed to it’s own style and theme.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Only 7 of the 8 rented floors in Electra Tower are actually occupied by Google. The remaining floor gives space to a new ‘Campus’, which was also opened in December by the Israeli Prime Minister. The ‘Campus Tel Aviv’, powered by Google for Entrepreneurs, is a new hub for entrepreneurs and developers, providing a base for start-up companies, and is only the second Google ‘Campus’ worldwide.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

Sustainability played a vital role to Google in the development of their new Tel Aviv offices and the project is currently awaiting LEED ‘Platinum’ certification, the first of its category in Israel.

Google Tel Aviv by Camenzind Evolution

The post Google Tel Aviv by
Camenzind Evolution
appeared first on Dezeen.

Beresheet Hotel: Our trip to the otherworldly property built within Ramon Crater in Israel’s Negev Desert

Beresheet Hotel

By Andrea Dicenzo The most stunning element to behold at the Beresheet Hotel is the view. While the staff will be eager to point this out to guests, the architecture and design of the structure reveals it first. The surrounding vista is of utmost importance to the design of Beresheet…

Continue Reading…

Google Tel-Aviv Office

Google a récemment emménagé dans de nouveaux bureaux à Tel Aviv dans la lignée des locaux Google. Avec un design signé par Camenzind Evolution en collaboration avec Setter Architects et le studio Yaron Tal, ces magnifiques bureaux aux ambiances diverses occupent 8 étages au sein de la Electra Tower.

G4
G2
G3
Google Office - Tel-Aviv41
Google Office - Tel-Aviv40
Google Office - Tel-Aviv39
Google Office - Tel-Aviv38
Google Office - Tel-Aviv37
Google Office - Tel-Aviv36
Google Office - Tel-Aviv35
Google Office - Tel-Aviv34
Google Office - Tel-Aviv33
Google Office - Tel-Aviv32
Google Office - Tel-Aviv31
Google Office - Tel-Aviv30
Google Office - Tel-Aviv29
Google Office - Tel-Aviv28
Google Office - Tel-Aviv27
Google Office - Tel-Aviv26
Google Office - Tel-Aviv25
Google Office - Tel-Aviv24
Google Office - Tel-Aviv23
Google Office - Tel-Aviv22
Google Office - Tel-Aviv21
Google Office - Tel-Aviv20
Google Office - Tel-Aviv19
Google Office - Tel-Aviv18
Google Office - Tel-Aviv17
Google Office - Tel-Aviv16
Google Office - Tel-Aviv15
Google Office - Tel-Aviv14
Google Office - Tel-Aviv13
Google Office - Tel-Aviv12
Google Office - Tel-Aviv11
Google Office - Tel-Aviv10
Google Office - Tel-Aviv9
Google Office - Tel-Aviv8
Google Office - Tel-Aviv7
Google Office - Tel-Aviv6
Google Office - Tel-Aviv5
Google Office - Tel-Aviv4
Google Office - Tel-Aviv3
Google Office - Tel-Aviv
Google Office - Tel-Aviv2
Google Office - Tel-Aviv42

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Israeli studio Paritzki & Liani Architects has squeezed a house with an exposed brickwork interior into the space between two existing properties in Tel Aviv (+ slideshow).

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

“A new building almost ‘not present’ from the outside is generated,” Paola Liani and Itai Paritzki told Dezeen. “We tried to reinvent what is not present in this particular context and zone of the city – creating an intimate, rich, deep space overlooking a small garden.”

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

The constrained site prevented the architects from giving the building many windows, so they added a long narrow skylight across the width of the roof to bring light down into both the ground and first floors.

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

A first floor corridor lines up with this skylight and features a gridded metal floor that lets light filter through to the open-plan kitchen, living room and dining area below.

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

The metal floor also allows residents on the ground floor to see others coming in and out of bedrooms on the level above.

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

A staircase with cantilevered iron treads connects the two floors and climbs up the side of one of two exposed brick walls. “We invested in this material because it moves the walls and the light, in a codified, almost historical way,” said the architects.

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

More gridded metal is mounted into rectangular frames to act as a semi-transparent screen for the staircase, taking the place of a balustrade.

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Paola Liani and Itai Paritzki founded their studio in 2001 and have also designed a house beside the face of a cliff and an apartment with a PVC ceiling.

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

See more architecture in Israel »

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Photography is by Amit Geron.

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Here’s some more information from the architects:


ZBL House | Paritzki & Liani Architects

The house is inserted in a series of row houses, not far from the university area in Tel Aviv. It is a pedestrian oasis composed of attached houses, only one story high, and filled with green areas. The building restrictions for that specific zone permit utmost a height of 4.5 m for the façade and 6.5 m for the roof top.

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

The idea of this residential volume situated between two walls and two strips of green is to design the space with the natural light, excluding any full-height subdivision or typological hierarchy; only by inserting two voids that trace the movements of the inhabitants.

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Two shifted rectangular cutouts of light: the first, located in the center of the volume directs the light from the roof level to the ground level, which is lifted 90 cm above the pathway (kitchen, dining, living area). The second, located on the external border between the house, the pool and the garden, consents the creation of a second naturally illuminated court, on underground level.

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Once entering the house, one perceives the visual depth between the different levels and micro gardens of Sambucus on ground floor.

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

The suspended passage (bridge) that leads to the night area on the first floor is a diaphragm made of metal net grid only 2 cm thick that assumes the value of a lightweight veil that refines the zenithal light while extending the silhouettes of who walks through it, “in order to see nothing but the sky”.

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Total site area: 198 m2
Total floor area: 300 m²
Number of stories: 3
Status: Completed, 2012

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Above: ground floor plan – click above for larger image and key

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Above: first floor plan – click above for larger image and key

ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Above: long section

The post ZBL House by
Paritzki & Liani Architects
appeared first on Dezeen.