Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

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

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

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

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

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

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

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

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

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

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

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

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

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

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

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

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

Photography is by Roger Frei.

Here’s some more information from clavienrossier:


Two in one villa
Geneva, Switzerland, 2012

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

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

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

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

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

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

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

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

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

Two In One Villa by clavienrossier

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

The building conforms to very high energy standards.

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

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Messe Basel New Hall by Herzog & de Meuron photographed by Hufton + Crow

These new photographs by Hufton + Crow show Herzog & de Meuron’s extension to the Messe Basel exhibition centre now that the three new halls are in use (+ slideshow).

Messe Basel New Hall by Herzog & de Meuron photographed by Hufton + Crow

Herzog & de Meuron replaced two of the older halls at the Messe Basel, which hosts Art Basel each June, with an extension that stacks three new ten-metre-high halls on top of one another to create volumes that appear displaced.

Messe Basel New Hall by Herzog & de Meuron photographed by Hufton + Crow

Brushed aluminium clads the exterior of the building and has a textured surface to create the impression of a basket weave.

Messe Basel New Hall by Herzog & de Meuron photographed by Hufton + Crow

Part of the extension bridges across the neighbouring Messeplatz public square to creates a sheltered area with a huge circular skylight.

Messe Basel New Hall by Herzog & de Meuron photographed by Hufton + Crow

Glazing surrounds the space and leads into a ground-floor lobby filled with shops, bars and restaurants.

Messe Basel New Hall by Herzog & de Meuron photographed by Hufton + Crow

The building was completed in February, but only opened to the public in April. Read more about the Messe Basel New Hall in our previous story.

Messe Basel New Hall by Herzog & de Meuron photographed by Hufton + Crow

Since completing the building, Herzog & de Meuron has also started construction of a football stadium in France and an outdoor bathing lake in Riehen.

Messe Basel New Hall by Herzog & de Meuron photographed by Hufton + Crow

The pair were also controversially chosen to design the new National Library of Israel in Jerusalem. See more architecture by Herzog & de Meuron.

Messe Basel New Hall by Herzog & de Meuron photographed by Hufton + Crow

See more photography by Hufton + Crow on Dezeen, or on the photographers’ website.

Messe Basel New Hall by Herzog & de Meuron photographed by Hufton + Crow

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photographed by Hufton + Crow
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House in Sonvico by Architetti Pedrozzi e Diaz Saravia

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

House in Sonvico by Architetti Pedrozzi e Diaz Saravia

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

House in Sonvico by Architetti Pedrozzi e Diaz Saravia

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

House in Sonvico by Architetti Pedrozzi e Diaz Saravia

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

House in Sonvico by Architetti Pedrozzi e Diaz Saravia

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

House in Sonvico by Architetti Pedrozzi e Diaz Saravia

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

House in Sonvico by Architetti Pedrozzi e Diaz Saravia

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

Photography is by Pino Brioschi.

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


House in Sonvico

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Architetti Pedrozzi e Diaz Saravia
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Work starts on Herzog & de Meuron’s Naturbad Riehen swimming pool

Work starts on Herzog & de Meuron's Naturbad Riehen swimming pool

News: construction is underway on an outdoor bathing lake in Riehen, Switzerland, by Swiss architects Herzog & de Meuron.

Naturbad Riehen will be filled with natural water without chlorine or chemical additives and is designed to accommodate 2000 bathers per day. As well as the pool for bathers, the Naturbad will incorporate a series of biological water treatment basins embedded in a sloping field on the other side of the road.

Herzog & de Meuron originally won a competition to design a municipal pool for Riehen in 1979, but the scheme was shelved in 1982. The Swiss architects were then commissioned to rethink the concept in 2007, when they abandoned the conventional swimming pool concept in favour of a facility using natural filtration.

The pool is expected to be completed in 2014.

Work starts on Herzog & de Meuron's Naturbad Riehen swimming pool

Last month Herzog & de Meuron was among 12 international firms shortlisted to design a new headquarters for the Nobel Prize in Stockholm, Sweden, while earlier this year they completed three halls for the Messe Basel exhibition centre – see all architecture by Herzog & de Meuron.

Last year we featured a proposal for a skyscraper in Peru with vertiginous swimming pools sticking out of every apartment and a concept for a pool under an inverted dome at an Istanbul primary school – see all swimming pools.

Work starts on Herzog and de Meuron's Naturbad Riehen swimming pool

Above: site plan

Images by Herzog & de Meuron.

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Naturbad Riehen swimming pool
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Apartment Building in Chailly by Personeni Raffaele Schärer Architects

Unfinished concrete surfaces and wire-fencing balustrades give an industrial aesthetic to the interiors of this apartment building in Lausanne, Switzerland, by local studio Personeni Raffaele Schärer Architects (+ slideshow).

Apartment Building in Chailly by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

“The choice of materials strives to create an abstract ambience,” architect Dany Roukoz told Dezeen. “The spaces remain open and incomplete, creating a simple environment in which one can unroll a vivid carpet, hang pictures and lay out personal furniture.”

Apartment Building in Chailly by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

Located to the north of the city in Chailly, the three-storey building was designed by Personeni Raffaele Schärer Architects with a triangular plan that stretches right to the corners of its site. Two apartments are located on each floor, while balconies are inserted into the sharply-pointed corners.

Apartment Building in Chailly by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

“The triangular shape is an approximate extrusion of the site’s legal construction limits,” said Roukoz. “The layout of the apartments on the lower levels is an orthogonal grid that is only interrupted by the free shape of the facade.”

Apartment Building in Chailly by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

Exposed concrete ceilings run through each room, while the concrete staircase stretches up through the centre of the building adn flooring inside the apartments is timber.

Apartment Building in Chailly by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

Roukoz explains: “Without any ‘coating’, we’ve shown the materials for what they really are.”

Apartment Building in Chailly by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

The exterior of the building is clad with grey render, while windows are surrounded by dark metal frames.

Apartment Building in Chailly by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

Other buildings by Personeni Raffaele Schärer Architects include an office block with a gridded exterior and a spiral staircase. See more architecture in Switzerland.

Apartment Building in Chailly by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

Photography is by Daniela & Tonatiuh.

Apartment Building in Chailly by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

Here’s some more information from Personeni Raffaele Schärer Architects:


Apartment building in Chailly, Lausanne

This building participates to the densification of the northern neighborhoods of Lausanne. Its tectonic derives from the site’s shape and a strict compliance with the building code. It addresses the various conditions around it: the street facing elevation underlines the gentle curve of Temple Avenue while the opposite one follows the waving course of the river Vuachere lined by trees. It is simply organized on three levels. Each apartment has a unique open layout extending out with its own private exterior space (garden, balcony and terrace).

Apartment Building in Chailly by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

Client: Françoise et Eric Hubert-Martinet
Architects: Personeni Raffaele Schärer Architects
Civil Engineer: SD ingénierie Lausanne SA
Environmental Engineer: Planair SA

Apartment Building in Chailly by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

Completed: 2011-2012
Total area: 600 sqm
Volume SIA 116: 2600 m3
Usage coefficient: 0.5
Levels: 3 + Basement
Apartments: 6

Apartment Building in Chailly by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

Structure: reinforced concrete
Facades: roughcast with metal coating on perimeter insulation
Windows: triple glazing, metal/PVC frames
Heating: district heating

Apartment Building in Chailly by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

Materials:
Floor – rustic wooden floor
Walls – plaster smoothing finish
Ceiling – exposed concrete

Apartment Building in Chailly by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

Above: site plan

Apartment Building in Chailly by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

Above: ground floor plan

Apartment Building in Chailly by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

Above: first floor plan

Apartment Building in Chailly by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

Above: second floor plan

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Personeni Raffaele Schärer Architects
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Xetum Kendrick Collection: Modernist automatic movements made in the spirit of the California sun

Xetum Kendrick Collection


Jeff Kuo founded Xetum to create watches with fresh, California-inspired, modern design and old school Swiss craftsmanship. Launched in 2009, the watches are immediately recognizable, marked by…

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Nowness In Residence: Rolf Sachs: The designer shows his holiday home and natural bob run in the restored Swiss Olympic Stadium

Nowness In Residence: Rolf Sachs

For their first venture in a new series exploring the intimate side of a designer’s life, Nowness takes a look at the alpine-obsessed artist Rolf Sachs and his Olympic Stadium-turned-holiday home in St. Moritz. The dynamic London-based designer spent much of his youth in Switzerland, and since shifting his…

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Stromer Electric Bicycle: Swiss-made e-bikes boasting up to 33mph of kick with the look and feel of a city commuter

Stromer Electric Bicycle

Best known for their chocolate, watches and banks, the Swiss are also quite skilled bicycle makers as it turns out. If the BMC + Lamborghini collaboration wasn’t proof enough, see Stromer and new ST1 pedal-assisted electric bicycle. Now available for the first time stateside, the highly engineered electric bicycle…

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Messe Basel New Hall by Herzog & de Meuron

Herzog & de Meuron has added three new halls to the Messe Basel exhibition centre in the north of the Swiss city where the architects are based (+ slideshow).

Messe Basel by Herzog & de Meuron

The Messe Basel, which hosts Art Basel each June, is undergoing a development programme to relocate exhibition areas around the neighbouring Messeplatz public square, so Herzog & de Meuron was asked to replace two of the existing halls with a new extension.

Messe Basel by Herzog & de Meuron

The architects have stacked three ten-metre-high halls on top of one another, creating a 2500-person events space on the ground floor and two additional exhibition rooms above.

Messe Basel by Herzog & de Meuron

Externally, these halls appear slightly displaced from each other. Textured aluminium clads the exterior, creating the impression of a woven facade.

Messe Basel by Herzog & de Meuron

Each hall features a wide-spanning construction to reduce the number of columns, while zig-zagging elevators provide a link between each of the levels.

Messe Basel by Herzog & de Meuron

A ground-floor lobby connects the extension with the existing exhibition halls and a series of shops, bars and restaurants. Glazing surrounds the facade to attract as many visitors inside as possible.

Messe Basel by Herzog & de Meuron

Part of the extension bridges across the Messeplatz and creates a sheltered area that has been dubbed the “City Lounge”. A large circular skylight punctures the roof above the space, framing the main entrance into the building.

Messe Basel by Herzog & de Meuron

The New Hall will be officially opened on the 23 April and the old building will be redeveloped and converted into apartments and offices.

Messe Basel by Herzog & de Meuron

Herzog & de Meuron, led by Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron, also recently completed the Parrish Art Museum, an art gallery on Long Island, New York. See more architecture by Herzog & de Meuron, including interviews we filmed with both architects at the opening of the 2012 Serpentine Gallery pavilion.

Messe Basel by Herzog & de Meuron

Photography is c/o MCH Group AG.

Messe Basel by Herzog & de Meuron

Here’s a project description from Herzog & de Meuron:


Messe Basel – New Hall Completed

The New Hall of Messe Basel is complete. Its realization is a key development in the Messe Basel’s aim to concentrate its exhibition halls around the Messeplatz (Exhibition Square). The surrounding Kleinbasel district will also benefit from the continuing upgrade of the Messeplatz and, at the same time, regaining former exhibition areas to convert into apartments and offices that will contribute to Basel’s urban development. Replacing two out-of-date halls, the new three-storey extension offers modern, flexible and versatile exhibition spaces with wide uninterrupted spans and tall 10m heights.

Messe Basel by Herzog & de Meuron

To provide the required indoor connection to all halls, the extension bridges over the Messeplatz and creates a new covered public space called the City Lounge. This key architectural and urban planning element defines the south end of the Messeplatz and is illuminated from above by a generous circular opening. Open at all times, the City Lounge not only defines the entrance to the fair spaces, but will be a focal point of public life in Kleinbasel.

Messe Basel by Herzog & de Meuron

The New Hall features three levels. The ground floor entrance level seamlessly links the City Lounge to the existing halls, the new event space for 2’500 spectators, and a number of shops, bars and restaurants. The dynamic sweep of the street level facade reacts to the flows of people and corresponds to the space required at the tram stop and entrances to the exhibition centre and Event Hall. Here, large expanses of glass create the spatial transparency both necessary and appropriate in order to achieve the openness envisioned for the exhibition hall complex and the enlivening of public urban life.

Messe Basel by Herzog & de Meuron

The two upper exhibition levels are offset from each other as separate volumes allowing them to respond and shift to specific urban conditions. From each point of view, the new hall offers a different perception and thus avoids the repetitive monotony typical of exhibition halls. This constant architectural variation is reinforced by applying a homogeneous material (aluminum) over all exterior surfaces.

Messe Basel by Herzog & de Meuron

The facade of articulated twisting bands strategically modulates and reduces the scale of the halls large volumes to its surroundings. This is not simply a decorative element but a practical means to regulate the fall of natural light on adjacent properties and to provide views in to the new hall’s social spaces and out towards specific views of the city of Basel.

Messe Basel by Herzog & de Meuron

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by Herzog & de Meuron
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Private House Bellmund by EXH Design

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

Private House Bellmund by EXH Design

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

Private House Bellmund by EXH Design

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

Private House Bellmund by EXH Design

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

Private House Bellmund by EXH Design

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

Private House Bellmund by EXH Design

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

Private House Bellmund by EXH Design

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

Private House Bellmund by EXH Design

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

Private House Bellmund by EXH Design

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

Private House Bellmund by EXH Design

Above: ground floor plan

Private House Bellmund by EXH Design

Above: first floor plan

Private House Bellmund by EXH Design

Above: second floor plan

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by EXH Design
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