American dream “breaking down” as young reject home ownership

American dream "breaking down"

News: flexible high-tech rental apartments with moving “robo-walls” should replace speculative developments as young people increasingly view homes as services rather than possessions, according to Kent Larson, director of the Changing Places Group at MIT Media Lab (+ movie).

“People of the millennial generation are rejecting private cars, private homes, brands, owning a lot of stuff,” Larson said, speaking at the Urban Age Electric City conference in London last week. “They think of all these things as services rather than possessions and I think that will powerfully impact cities of the future.”

The cheapest generation

Larson said young people don’t want the type of micro-apartments being proposed by mayors of major US cities. “Mayor Bloomberg of New York is saying in order for New York City to remain globally competitive, they have to make housing affordable for young people, so the idea is to just build tiny little apartments,” Larson said. “Mayor Thomas M Menino in Boston says the same thing. The problem is young people don’t really like these tiny little apartments with a pull-out sofa.”

City chiefs in San Francisco this month voted to allow apartments as small as 20 square metres to help alleviate the housing shortage while New York floated a similar idea this summer. Boston and Vancouver are among other cities exploring the idea.

“The American dream of owning your house and owning your car and freedom and status and all of that, I think that’s breaking down,” Larson said.

Changing Places Group transformable CityHome

Instead of micro-apartments, Larson believes the future lies with flexible, high-tech interior spaces that allow residents to customise them over time to suit their changing needs [above]. MIT Media Lab’s Changing Places Group, set up to explore new strategies for living and working spaces, has proposed a system of moving “robo-walls” and foldaway furniture that could fit within a standard loft-type space but provide greater flexibility than today’s apartments.

The CityHome proposal [above] also allows residents to generate their optimum dwelling configuration using software that analyses their lifestyle and living preferences.

“For the city I’m particularly interested in transformable houses; tiny little homes that function as if they were many times larger,” Larson said.

He added: “I don’t believe in smart homes, I think that’s a totally bogus concept. I  think builders only know how to build dumb things, so you want to bring smart things into the home.”

Generic high-rise residential blocks

Larson said the construction of vast, generic high-rise apartment blocks [above] to house newly urbanised populations was leading to “dreary, single-purpose residential ghettos that are almost totally dependent on the private automobile.”

Taipei. Photograph by Kent Larson

Residents in such developments often strive to personalise their homes, he said, showing a photograph of a high-rise development in Taipei where occupants had added balconies, awnings, glazing and other ad-hoc additions. “If you go to Taipei where I took this photograph [above], you see these generic commodity housing projects bursting with this expression of personalisation, you know kind of ad-hoc customisation,” Larson said. “They’re illegal and often they are death traps, but it’s a powerful sort of visual acknowledgement of that desire.”

He added: “I’m an architect, but it doesn’t scale to have an architect work on homes for 300 million rural Chinese who are moving to the city over the next fifteen years. So we’re looking at design algorithms where you match a personal profile to a solution profile, you assemble a completely configured apartment and then you give people the tools to go into that space and refine it using these kind of advanced computational tools.”

In future, it will become normal for people to share, rather than buy, the amenities they need, Larson argued. “We’re moving towards shared resources in the office, shared desks, shared shops, shared fab-labs, shared electronics labs, shared recreational spaces.”

More videos from the Changing Places Group can be seen here. Images are courtesy of Kent Larson.

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Villa Solaire by JKA and FUGA

French architects JKA and design studio FUGA have converted a nineteenth century Alpine farmhouse in France into a holiday villa with chunky wooden cladding and cut-outs based on the shadows of other buildings (+ slideshow).

Villa Solaire by JKA and FUGA

To recreate the rhythms and patterns of the traditional local buildings, JKA and FUGA used one-inch-thick roughly sawn spruce planks, which they had to source over a year in advance. ”Only a few trunks presented enough nodes and few clapboards big enough were able to be pulled from each trunk,” architect Jérôme Aich told Dezeen.

Villa Solaire by JKA and FUGA

In typical Alpine barns the gaps between disjointed wooden planks would allow air to circulate round drying hay, but at Villa Solaire the gaps between each panel simply let extra light into the rooms inside.

Villa Solaire by JKA and FUGA

The architects studied the shadows cast onto the villa by neighbouring buildings to determine the positions of the cut-out patterns. “The pattern within the cladding is designed to respond to the path described by these shadows. The areas receiving a greater amount of sun are all the more open,” Aich said.

Villa Solaire by JKA and FUGA

Originally they planned to cut the wood digitally before installation, but instead found it easier and more economical to attach the boards to the building frame first, then stencil on the patterns and employ a local carpenter to cut them by hand. “The construction marks slowly disappear but the cladding keeps the valor and traces of the handmade work,” Aich explained.

Villa Solaire by JKA and FUGA

The framework of the original farmhouse was restored, which the architects describe as an unusual practice. “A lot of operations on old farmhouses used to cut out the wood structure of the first level and replace it with concrete structures. In our case, the existing skeleton was integrally conserved,” added Aich.

Villa Solaire by JKA and FUGA

Inside the two-story house, a ground floor wading pool is surrounded with recycled slate tiles that were originally used to cover the roof.

Villa Solaire by JKA and FUGA

Bedroom suites and a kitchen are located on the first floor and are positioned at each of the corners, leaving a cross-shaped living room between with windows on all four walls.

Villa Solaire by JKA and FUGA

The different areas of this room are separated by level changes, which the architects describe as a reference to the topography of the of the Rhône-Alpes region.

Villa Solaire by JKA and FUGA

“The house is conceived as an imprint of its surroundings,” concluded Aich. “Imprint in terms of landscape and geography, in terms of sunlight, as well as in terms of history.”

Villa Solaire by JKA and FUGA

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Villa Solaire by JKA and FUGA

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Villa Solaire by JKA and FUGA

Photography is by Julien Lanoo

Here’s a few words from the architects


Villa Solaire
JKA and FUGA

The project consists in a conversion of an ancient farmhouse into a luxury rental villa, revisiting traditional techniques. This former farmhouse is located in the historic district of Pied de La Plagne, in Morzine. Built in 1826, it was singled out by the municipality as a landmark for traditional architecture.

Villa Solaire by JKA and FUGA

Drawing on the context: inside/outside fitting

A uniform cladding wraps the whole farm. One of the challenges of the project was to preserve its appearance, while filtering light into the heart of the building.

Villa Solaire by JKA and FUGA

The traditional technique of decorative cut-outs within the wood strips was used to perform specific perforations within the planks. The design of this simple and contemporary pattern is consistent with the equipment and techniques used by the local carpenter for cutting spruce slats. These cut-outs recall the disjointed battens of the traditional barn, used for drying hay.

Villa Solaire by JKA and FUGA

Today, these slits bring light inside the building. The glazed elements of the project, which are flush with the inside of the façade, are partially hidden by the cover strips. As they are not visible from outside they do not interfere with the uniformity of the cladding.

Villa Solaire by JKA and FUGA

Throughout the year, the surrounding roofs and buildings cast their shadows on the façades. The pattern within the cladding is designed to respond to the path described by these shadows: the areas receiving a greater amount of sun are all the more open and provide a certain legibility of the continuity between the common spaces of the house.

Villa Solaire by JKA and FUGA

This concept of interlocking inside/outside, evokes a lifestyle in harmony with its surroundings and leads to the project being named the “solar house”: a house exposed on its four façades to the path of the sun, perceived as a sundial.

Villa Solaire by JKA and FUGA

Above: site plan – click above to see a larger image

Finding one’s bearings: a living geography.

The idea is to move through this house between four “blocks” steady as rocks, located at each corner of the building. Each independent unit forms a suite with sleeping area and amenities. Between these four blocks, the remaining space is occupied by a succession of stacked floors at different levels in the framework. This continuum of generous space welcomes the activities shared by the inhabitants: cooking, dining, watching a film, conversing in the living room, warming up around the fire…

Villa Solaire by JKA and FUGA

Above: ground floor plan – click above to see a larger image

These four blocks mark the house as the summits punctuate the valley. In Haute Savoie, one instinctively relates the farms to the mountains. Again, this symbolic association is translated in each block as it is identified in its facing mountainous terrain, just as the framework can be interpreted as a forest, whose various topographical lines are recalled within the different floor levels.

Villa Solaire by JKA and FUGA

Above: first floor plan – click above to see a larger image

Revealing the structure: nested scales or “the complex of the snail”.

The charm of the original farm resides in the existing structure. Conserving its overall appearance was of one of the project’s key challenges, which motivated its restoration: It was fully recovered and the original plastering preserved after brushing and trimming.

Villa Solaire by JKA and FUGA

Above: section – click above to see a larger image

Compressed spaces, expanded spaces. Nesting areas.

In order to clear the room of the nave while meeting the rental house needs, utility functions were closely integrated. A strong contrast results from the scales of the cosy bedrooms, bathrooms and sleeping alcoves, next to the open central meeting space. The complexity of these nested spaces is combined with a similar research in terms of details and materials.

Villa Solaire by JKA and FUGA

Above: section – click above to see a larger image

Client: Private
Cost: 1.100.000 € excl. tax
Area: 620 m² gross floor area
Beginning of studies: October 2009
Construction completion: January 2012
Program: Rental house – capacity 16 persons
Design Team: JKA – Jérémie Koempgen Architecture, FUGA – J.Aich & M.Recordon designers, J.Koempgen and J.Aich are members of the collective Ferpect
Contractors: SARL Laperrousaz (carpenter) / SARL Yves Gourvest Construction (masonry) / SARL Fourcade Herve (interior design) / Etablissements Guy Perracino (joinery) / Labevière (Electrician) / Marcellin (heating) / SARL CQFD Drouet (shutters) / Florinda Donga (curtains)

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Dezeen’s A-Zdvent calendar: House K by Hiroyuki Shinozaki Architects

House K by Hiroyuki Shinozaki Architects

This house in Tokyo with one tall skinny wing and one short fat one is at number eleven in our A-Zdvent calendar. Read more about House K »

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San Francisco city chiefs vote to allow 20-square-metre “micro apartments”

San Francisco plans micro apartments

News: San Francisco city chiefs have voted to allow the development of “micro apartments” as small as 20 square metres in an attempt to alleviate the housing shortage in the US city.

Each of the proposed micro apartments will be required to have a minimum of 150 square feet of living space not including the kitchen, bathroom or built-in storage – but the kitchen could be included in the living space, say city supervisors.

That means the properties, which are expected to rent for between $1,300 and $1,500 per month, would be five square metres smaller than the micro-units recently proposed for New York by mayor Michael Bloomberg, and 50 square centimetres smaller than Vancouver’s new micro-loft conversions, the smallest rental units in Canada.

San Francisco plans micro apartments

Above and top: images are from developers Panoramic Interests

City supervisor Scott Wiener has backed the reduced minimum size in the hope of lowering rents in the city, which currently average around $2,000 a month for a studio.

Mayor Edwin Lee is expected to make a decision on the legislation this month before the proposals can become law.

We’ve previously reported on New York’s competition to design micro-units as well as plans to turn disused garages in east London into pop-up homes.

Other tiny properties we’ve featured include a 2.6-metre-wide guest house helicoptered onto a hillside in Switzerland and a quilted mobile home on the back of a tricycle.

See all our stories from San Francisco »
See all our stories about apartments »

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Maison 2G by Avenier & Cornejo Architectes

French studio Avenier & Cornejo Architectes has used strips of cedar cladding to wrap every surface of this house in Orsay, France (+ slideshow).

Maison 2G by Avenier and Cornejo Architectes

Above: photograph is by Cristobal Palma

The architects wrapped the cedar strips over each wall and and around the gabled roof of the two-storey Maison 2G. “To have a fully wooden exterior was a logical reaction to the environment,” said Avenier & Cornejo‘s Miguel Cornejo. “The house is at the end of a road by the forest, so it fulfilled a transition between urban and natural environments.”

Maison 2G by Avenier and Cornejo Architectes

Large windows and openings let light penetrate the wooden walls, plus rooms inside are organised to receive daylight at the times of day when they will be most used. “The kitchen was orientated east to have breakfast with morning light and the living room has the soft evening light of the west,” said Cornejo.

Maison 2G by Avenier and Cornejo Architectes

The ground-floor living room is a double-height space that is described by the designers as being “carved”. It opens out to a terrace and garden.

Maison 2G by Avenier and Cornejo Architectes

Above: photograph is by Cristobal Palma

“We worked on the flow of movement in the house to reduce corridors and create a dynamic flux,” added Cornejo. “In this way we sculpted an intersection of movement and perspective.”

Maison 2G by Avenier and Cornejo Architectes

Above: photograph is by Cristobal Palma

A staircase winds up through the centre of the house and leads to three bedrooms, all located on the first floor.

Maison 2G by Avenier and Cornejo Architectes

Other houses we’ve featured in France include one with cut-out shutters on its glazed facade and one with deep larch window frames.

Maison 2G by Avenier and Cornejo Architectes

See more stories about houses on Dezeen »

Maison 2G by Avenier and Cornejo Architectes

Above: photograph is by Cristobal Palma

Photography is by Stephane Chalmeau, apart from where otherwise stated.

Here’s some more information from the architects:


House 2G
Orsay (France)

Before becoming a family home the land near the University of South Paris, Orsay, was better known by students for a take away bus that served English fast food.

Maison 2G by Avenier and Cornejo Architectes

Located at the end of the Rue Georges Clemenceau, at the intersection with the entrance to the university grounds, this site has a triple orientation, including a view of the park.

Maison 2G by Avenier and Cornejo Architectes

Above: photograph is by Cristobal Palma

Architects Avenier Cornejo’s clients are friends of friends. The development of the project was a collaboration that had a lot of freedom. The family, having a third child, was open to any proposal for their new home that offered plenty of quality light; which was previously lacking.

Maison 2G by Avenier and Cornejo Architectes

Above: ground floor plan – click above to see larger image

The challenge of the project was also to insert a contemporary house ecologically in a suburban fabric, more or less traditional, enjoying its view on the park. The ground is very wet and required deep foundations for the supporting structure. It is specified to meet the 2005 target for RT operation. In addition to basic insulation, natural vegetation was added externally. The compact volume limits energy losses.

Maison 2G by Avenier and Cornejo Architectes

Above: first floor plan – click above to see larger image

Flirting with the building regulations of the materials and the context of the landscape led a project of ‘total look’ wood. The volume is simple and one-piece, the wood cladding envelope dramatic. Composed of strips of cedar crate, this one allows omnipresent light, to be so over-input and redirected the angular pants interiors. The volumes are designed and vibrate throughout the day.

Maison 2G by Avenier and Cornejo Architectes

Above: roof plan – click above to see larger image

To offset the plain exterior the interior is enhanced by a carved inside: a large volume unites the two levels of the house, patio lights rooms and bathroom and staircase structure the ground floor…

Maison 2G by Avenier and Cornejo Architectes

Above: section – click above to see larger image

This framework looks onto the landscaped garden to enjoy its charms. The untreated cladding has been planted with patina ash and sweet fruit integration.

Maison 2G by Avenier and Cornejo Architectes

Above: front elevation – click above to see larger image

Client: Private
Architects: Avenier & Cornejo Architectes
Building company: Martins Construction
Mission: Complete
Programme: Private house
Surface: 216 sq m
Cost: 400 000 Euros HT
Phase: Completed

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Dezeen’s A-Zdvent calendar: J House by Isolation Unit and Yosuke Ichii

J House by Isolation Unit and Yosuke Ichii

We’re into double figures on our A-Zdvent calendar and at number ten is J House in Japan, which features rooms that open out to one another. Read more about J House »

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Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

Triangular roof lights step up the side of this terrace of houses built on a former industrial site in north London.

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

Architects David Mikail and Annalie Riches designed and live in the building, which has stepped and angled roofs to prevent blocking the light of other residences close by.

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

“Roofs have been shaved and angled to avoid injuring the light and amenity to the rear, and in particular the ground floor windows of the closest neighbours,” Mikhail told Dezeen.

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

Siberian larch clads the top storey of each unit and wraps around to cover the back of the building, while the facade along the street is predominantly brick.

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

A two-storey residence occupies the two floors at the south end of the scheme, while another sits above a ground floor flat to the north and a three-storey property is sandwiched in the middle.

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

The stepped volume creates balconies on each level and a series of gardens at the back of the building can be accessed from any of the ground-floor homes.

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

Douglas fir is used for skirting, panelling and flooring inside the house.

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

External balustrades and the sliding front doors are made from aluminium mesh coated in anodised bronze, the same finish applied to the windows.

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

The architects ran into problems when they found a well hidden on site. ”We discovered an absolutely beautiful brick-lined well after we started digging,” explained Mikhail.

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

“We would have glazed it over and made it visible, but unfortunately it sat directly between 151A and 151B. Instead, we bridged over it in reinforced concrete but not before inserting an aluminum rectangular hollow section down into the well and directly between the party walls. It’s now visible as a metal slot in the brickwork at about 600mm off the pavement – a secret wishing well!” he continued.

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

Church Walk is named after the street it is located on, which is one of oldest streets in Stoke Newington, north London, just a stone’s throw from Dezeen’s offices.

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

David Mikhail Architects won the New London Architecture’s Don’t Move, Improve! competition with a project that extended a London terraced house by just one metre.

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

See all our stories about housing »

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

Photography is by Tim Crocker.

David Mikhail Architects sent us the information below:


Architects David Mikhail and Annalie Riches have just completed their own development in North London, and comprises two houses and two apartments on a tight urban site. The project is a detailed response to themes of density, overlooking and overshadowing, problems often found in urban housing.

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

Originally a stroll between the churches of Clissold Park and Newington green, Church Walk is now truncated by the Stoke Newington School, and ends abruptly at the schools service entrance. But along the way, up from Newington Green, it is hugely varied, with some notable one-off houses, semi industrial buildings, a much-tendered communal allotment, 19th century flats and post war deck access housing.

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

The architects purchased the site at auction, which had a planning permission for two flats and a bungalow, both designed and financed the scheme, and are now living in one of the 4 units. The site is approximately 21m x 11m and roughly rectangular. Significantly overlooked at the rear, it is also overshadowed for much of the afternoon. At the southwest end, the site boundary comes to within 2 meters of neighbour’s living room windows. In this very challenging context, the scheme sought to carve out memorable housing at a high density, whilst managing to remain neighbourly and to enhance the street.

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

Within the four units, various types of accommodation are provided. A two-storey house entered via a small private courtyard sits at the southern end. In the middle of the terrace is a house over three floors with bedrooms on the ground floor, living rooms on the first floor and a study with roof terrace on the second floor. At the northern end is a one bedroom flat with a rear garden, and above it a four-storey apartment. Each property has its own entrance from the street.

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

Above: site location plan

The building form has been closely calibrated using the BRE Guide to Sunlight and Daylight. Roofs have been shaved and angled to avoid injuring the light and amenity to the rear, and in particular the ground floor windows of the closest neighbours.

Above: ground floor plan – click for larger image

A ‘concertina’ arrangement of angled walls to the back means that no windows overlook or are overlooked by the wall of neighbouring windows (8-12 Clissold Road), since this building is at 45 degrees to Church Walk. Along the street, south facing terraces and wildflower garden roofs step up in a ziggurat form to give an animated and unexpectedly verdant streetscape. Living rooms, roof terraces and bedrooms address the street, providing much needed natural surveillance and security to an area of Church Walk that had witnessed consistent anti-social behaviour.

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

Above: first floor plan – click for larger image

 

Materials are intentionally taken from a limited palette, with white oiled Siberian larch, arranged board over board giving a ‘corduroy’ effect, a light buff coloured brick set in a flush white lime mortar giving an homogenous ‘cast’ feel to the street facade, recalling the ubiquitous London stock brickwork of Georgian London, and a large gauge expanded aluminum mesh, finished like the windows in anodized bronze; individually robust materials, but which together with the wildflower roofs, seek to achieve a new delicacy and lightness.

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

Above: second floor plan – click for larger image

 

At the rear, brick gives way to a much softer and lighter feel, with whitened Siberian Larch taken right down to low brick plinth walls. As well as giving good levels of reflected light to the Clissold Road flats, it was also chosen over the original zinc for both its acoustic and perceptual softness. Triangular roof lights at ground level use opaque white glass to maintain privacy from the potential gaze of the flats whilst providing good light levels, and dramatic interiors. The raked slopes of these ground floor roof lights are calibrated to minimise any possible sense of bulk to each of the 151 Church Walk neighbours. Since the photographs were taken, the gardens have been planted and bespoke hazel wood hurdles have been suspended between the three separate gardens, giving a textured enclosure to each property.

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

Above: third floor plan – click for larger image

 

There are a variety of outdoor spaces. In addition to brick lined courtyard gardens at the rear, three 10m2 terraces orient south and provide an elevated place to enjoy the wider views back to the City of London and the best sunlight.

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

Above: roof plan – click for larger image

House 151A is entered via a small courtyard garden off of the street, its entrance gate the first in a series of expanded aluminium sliding gates, bin and meter store doors, and balustrades. House 151B and flat 151C have sliding mesh security screens in front of external lobbies, with glazed doors and bedroom windows behind. These coordinate with bespoke letterboxes that are key operated from inside the lobby, LED illuminated street numbers and entry phones. The front door to 151D is directly off the street, into its own staircase hall, from which you rise 4 storeys to the top floor study / bedroom and roof terrace. Whilst 151A is more horizontally arranged, 151D has a vertical emphasis. It also enjoys a north facing roof terrace at the living floor level, which in the summer gets end of day sun.

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

 

Internally the theme of whitened wood and muted shades continues. Douglas fir, either white oiled (joinery) or soaped with a white lye stain (floors) is used throughout. Instead of the usual shadow-gaps and minimal detailing, here a more robust, traditional architectural language is used, which was considered more suitable for a development; architraves, lined window reveals and internal sills, tall skirting boards and solid wide plank floors, staircases and joinery; one species of wood, and all prepared in the joinery shop of the builders, Eurobuild Contractors Limited.

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

Above: east elevation – click for larger image

Due to the complex section and the pressure to retain good light levels to others, many of the principle rooms on the street side have relatively low ceiling heights at 2.1m, opening onto the more generous 4.5m vaulted ceilings over kitchens and dining rooms. Even so, full height doors and generously tall skirting are designed to accentuate this lower nature. Like the brickwork, the skirting brings to mind 18/19th century housing. Each room’s skirting is a different height to negotiate the particular features or connections of a room. For example in the living rooms they are at their most luxurious, coordinating with the 425mm high Douglas fir window seat sills. In bedrooms they line with thresholds to roof terraces, at 280mm.

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

Above: west elevation – click for larger image

At the heart of each of the three larger dwellings is a double height kitchen / dining room. In 151B and D, these identical spaces are lent drama by Douglas Fir staircases sitting over integrated kitchen storage going up to the top floor room, with full height windows looking northeast, and with the spectacular triangular roof lights which are visible from the street, sitting directly over the kitchen. Similar themes can be seen in the layout of 151A. Construction is of simple load bearing concrete block and timber floors and roofs with the minimum use of steel beams for the wider spans.

Church Walk by David Mikhail and Annalie Riches

Above: long section – click for larger image

It has low temperature water under floor heating, using condensing gas boilers. This combined with whole house ventilation with heat recovery and good levels of airtightness (3m3) ensure both low fuel bills and a well-tempered internal environment winter and summer. Almost all the lighting is LED. Bricks in lime mortar will be re-usable in the future. The wildflower roofs help to mitigate the loss of insect and plant life that was found when the site was abandoned.

Given the context this site could have resulted in an introspective solution. Instead David Mikhail and Annalie Riches have achieved something far richer, inside and out. With its multiple levels, its terracing and its stepped garden roofs, this housing terrace manages to engage with its location in a way that makes a significant contribution to this part of the London.

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Dezeen’s A-Zdvent calendar: House I by Yoshichika Takagi

House I by Yoshichika Takagi

Made up of a series of interconnecting boxes, this house surrounded by car parks in Japan is the latest addition to our A-Zdvent calendar. Read more about House I »

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House I by Yoshichika Takagi
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Dezeen’s A-Zdvent calendar: H House by Budapesti Műhely

H House by Budapesti Műhely

A contemporary interpretation of a traditional gabled farmhouse in Hungary is the letter H in our A-Zdvent calendar of houses named with letters. Read more about H House »

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H House by Budapesti Műhely
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Eco-Resort Pedras Salgadas by Luís Rebelo de Andrade and Diogo Aguiar

These seven woodland cabins are nestled amongst the trees of a park and spa in northern Portugal (+ slideshow).

Eco-Resort Pedras Salgadas by Diogo Aguiar and Luís Rebelo de Andrade

Designed by Portuguese architects Luís Rebelo de Andrade and Diogo Aguiar, the huts offer a peaceful retreat for guests visiting the park, which is located on the edge of the spa-town of Pedras Salgadas.

Eco-Resort Pedras Salgadas by Diogo Aguiar and Luís Rebelo de Andrade

“Knowing that we had a responsibility to build tourist accommodation in one of the most beautiful parks in the country, we took maximum care to have a minimal effect on the local nature,” Diogo Aguiar told Dezeen. “We chose to build small and dispersed huts rather than do a large concentrated building, promoting more intimate relationships between the visitor and the park.”

EcoEco-Resort Pedras Salgadas by Diogo Aguiar and Luís Rebelo de Andrade-Resort Pedras Salgadas by Luís Rebelo de Andrade and Diogo

All seven cabins are raised up on stilts to negotiate the uneven terrain and to have a minimal impact on the ground. Each building also features walls clad with grey slate tiles and balconies surrounded with wooden slats.

Eco-Resort Pedras Salgadas by Diogo Aguiar and Luís Rebelo de Andrade

“The outer coating in slate tiles refers to the local construction traditions. It is very interesting because of its pixel texture but also because of the way it reacts to the weather; it reflects the sun in the evening and gets dark and shiny when it rains,” explained Aguiar.

Eco-Resort Pedras Salgadas by Diogo Aguiar and Luís Rebelo de Andrade

The buildings were designed as different combinations of three identical modules, which include a living room and kitchen, an entrance and bathroom, plus one bedroom.

Eco-Resort Pedras Salgadas by Diogo Aguiar and Luís Rebelo de Andrade

“Once on site, the perfect house configurations were chosen by considering the available space between the trees, the landscape views and the entrance location,” said Aguiar.

Eco-Resort Pedras Salgadas by Diogo Aguiar and Luís Rebelo de Andrade

Both Aguiar and Rebelo de Andrade often team up with other architects and we’ve previously featured a glowing bar that Aguiar designed with Teresa Otto and a house with a planted facade that Rebelo de Andrade worked on with two collaborators.

Eco-Resort Pedras Salgadas by Diogo Aguiar and Luís Rebelo de Andrade

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Eco-Resort Pedras Salgadas by Diogo Aguiar and Luís Rebelo de Andrade

Photography is by Fernando Guerra.

Here’s a few words from the architects


Eco-Resort \\ Pedras Salgadas
Luís Rebelo de Andrade + Diogo Aguiar

The new eco-resort of Parque de Pedras Salgadas, Portugal, consists of a set of seven small houses in perfect harmony with the surrounding outstanding nature.

Eco-Resort Pedras Salgadas by Diogo Aguiar and Luís Rebelo de Andrade

Designed in a modular prefabrication system but flexible to adapt to the specific places within the park, these houses result in several different combinations of the same three modules (entrance/bathing – living – sleeping) creating different morphologies and different dialogues with the surrounding nature, wisely occupying the empty spaces between the trunks of large trees and, at the same time, allowing each home to be unique, special and worth visiting.

Eco-Resort Pedras Salgadas by Diogo Aguiar and Luís Rebelo de Andrade

The pitched roofs that characterise the intervention redefine the contours of the park boundary and result, within the houses in comfortable but dynamic spaces. The vain corner contradicts the structural logic of the house but creates the illusion that the park is inside the house framing living nature pictures.

Eco-Resort Pedras Salgadas by Diogo Aguiar and Luís Rebelo de Andrade

Above: site plan

The outer coating in slate tiles refers to the local construction traditions and the slatted wood used when there is a balcony creates the perfect resting spaces.

Eco-Resort Pedras Salgadas by Diogo Aguiar and Luís Rebelo de Andrade

Above: typical floor plan

Location: Parque de Pedras Salgadas, Bornes de Aguiar, Portugal
Completion: 2012
Typology: seven dwellings for eco-resort

Eco-Resort Pedras Salgadas by Diogo Aguiar and Luís Rebelo de Andrade

Above: possible module combinations

Architects: Luís Rebelo de Andrade + Diogo Aguiar
Collaborators team: Madalena Andrade, Raquel Jorge
Client: Unicer
Construction: Modular System
Client: Unicer

Eco-Resort Pedras Salgadas by Diogo Aguiar and Luís Rebelo de Andrade

Above: typical elevation

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Luís Rebelo de Andrade and Diogo Aguiar
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