Marc Gerritsen’s skeletal Naked House exposes its insides to the seafront

Architect and photographer Marc Gerritsen designed this house for himself on a Thai island, with an skeleton-like structure that frames sea views (+ slideshow).

Naked House by Marc Gerritsen

Nestled into a hillside amidst the nature reserves of Koh Samui, Naked House gives Marc Gerritsen an escape from his busy city life, which sees him travel frequently between Taiwan and other Asian countries.

Naked House by Marc Gerritsen

“Life in Taipei is very hectic, and I needed a place to escape. I really wanted a quiet area and a fantastic view,” said Gerritsen. “The house was a return to the basic values in life: good clean air, wide-open space, quiet solitude.”

Naked House by Marc Gerritsen

The five-storey house is formed of a series of levels that cascade down the hillside, protruding like the tiers of a staircase.

Naked House by Marc Gerritsen

Gerritsen chose very basic materials to emphasise the location and view. The base of the house is concrete, while a galvanised steel frame rests on top to contain the two upper floors.

Naked House by Marc Gerritsen

“There are no embellishments. The focus is on the space rather than the materials,” said the architect.

Naked House by Marc Gerritsen

An open-plan living space occupies the ground floor, fronted by wooden-framed windows that slide back to overhang the facade. These windows open the space out to a large terrace with wooden decking, a tiled swimming pool and concrete planting boxes.

Naked House by Marc Gerritsen

The living space contains a simple kitchen with low-level cupboards on one side, a seating area on the other, and a dining area sandwiched in between. There is also a patio shaded by the flat steel roof canopy.

Naked House by Marc Gerritsen

An exterior concrete staircase leads up to a master bedroom, which perches at the top of the house. This is a self-contained structure that also features sliding windows, balcony and an over-hanging roof.

Naked House by Marc Gerritsen

An open-air en suite sits alongside the bedroom, offering panoramic views of the surroundings from the bath and shower.

Naked House by Marc Gerritsen

Another staircase wraps around the outside of the house, tracing the curve of the hillside from the living space down to floors below.

Naked House by Marc Gerritsen

An exposed room with a swinging sofa occupies the space below the deck, along with a steam room.

Naked House by Marc Gerritsen

The next floor down contains two symmetrical bedrooms, where large sliding wooden doors reveal huge bowl-like baths, while the final floor houses houses an office and a maid’s room.

Here’s a description from Marc Gerritsen:


The Naked House

The main thing about this location is the expanse of the surroundings and the quietness. Life in Taipei is very hectic, and I needed a place to escape. I really wanted a quiet area and a fantastic view. Having an open plan living room, with doors that can totally slide away, which look out at the pool and the ocean – that’s something I’d been thinking about for a long time. With this plot, I was able to put the pieces of the puzzle together. The house was a return to the basic values in life: good clean air, wide-open space, quiet solitude. With these basic values you can be in a space that is uncluttered, and your mind can become still. That’s also the reason behind the very basic materials that I have used: concrete, wood, steel and glass. There are no embellishments. The focus is on the space rather than the materials.

Naked House by Marc Gerritsen

I originally planned three stories: two bedrooms on the bottom; the pool, living area and kitchen on the middle level; and an office on top. But I’ve added a bathroom on the living room level, a laundry room and pantry. I wanted a simple kitchen, with no overhead cupboards or tall fridge, so the pantry is good for storage. I added a freestanding open-air bathroom, as the top room became a magnificent master bedroom, which needed an en-suite.

Naked House by Marc Gerritsen

The tank and plant room became a large open room with a swing bed, underneath the deck I added a steam room, and the space below the bedrooms now houses an office and maid’s room. So it ended up being five stories – the result of a work in progress.

Naked House by Marc Gerritsen

My work over the last few years as an architectural and interior photographer has taught me what not to do. Looking at all the incredibly fine detailed properties I photographed in Asia. I thought: “Is this really necessary to be comfortable? If I walk on a concrete floor or if I walk on a marble floor, is it going to make my living experience so much better?” No. You just need a floor to walk on. I am interested in a return to basics, in a luxury monastic way of living.

Naked House by Marc Gerritsen
First floor plan – click for larger image
Naked House by Marc Gerritsen
Ground floor plan – click for larger image
Naked House by Marc Gerritsen
Basement level one floor plan – click for larger image
Naked House by Marc Gerritsen
Basement level two floor plan – click for larger image
Naked House by Marc Gerritsen
Basement level three floor plan – click for larger image

The post Marc Gerritsen’s skeletal Naked House
exposes its insides to the seafront
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Thumm by Pana Objects: An eye-pleasing beech wood iPhone dock that amplifies your tunes acoustically, with no plugs required

Thumm by Pana Objects


While many of the latest speakers for smartphones rely on highly specialized tech like Bluetooth or Airplay connectivity, a group of Thai designers chose to strip it all down to one material—beech wood. The result is a simple, beautiful speaker that uses natural…

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Seven-metre doors reveal a courtyard inside TACHA_Design’s Baan Yo Yen house

Seven-metre high doors fold open to reveal a courtyard and tree at the centre of this house in Nonthaburi, Thailand, by local studio TACHA_Design (+ slideshow).

Baan Yo Yen courtyard house in Thailand by TACHA_Design

Built with a steel frame, concrete walls and timber cladding, Baan Yoo Yen is a modern two-storey residence that takes its cues from the old courtyard houses that are typically found in many Asian countries.

Baan Yo Yen courtyard house in Thailand by TACHA_Design

TACHA_Design placed the courtyard in the central section of the house and added a pair of folding glass doors in front to allow it open out to a narrow garden slotted between the building and the street.

Baan Yo Yen courtyard house in Thailand by TACHA_Design

Rooms on both floors overlook the courtyard and the large tree at its centre. There’s also a skylight overhead to bring extra daylight into the space.

Baan Yo Yen courtyard house in Thailand by TACHA_Design

Using the Thai word for terrace, architects Waranyu Makarabhirom and Sonthad Srisang explain: “Chan connects people with people, links people with nature and joins people with their surroundings.”

Baan Yo Yen courtyard house in Thailand by TACHA_Design

This layout also enables natural ventilation using the stack effect, drawing cool air in at the base and allowing warmer air to escape at the upper level.

Baan Yo Yen courtyard house in Thailand by TACHA_Design

The house’s staircase is positioned behind the south-facing rear elevation, intended to act as a barrier against solar heat gain.

Baan Yo Yen courtyard house in Thailand by TACHA_Design

Living and dining rooms occupy the ground level, where they open out to the surroundings as well the central courtyard. A guest bedroom is also located on this floor, while the four main family bedrooms can be found on the storey above.

Baan Yo Yen courtyard house in Thailand by TACHA_Design

Photography is by BeerSingnoi.

Here’s a project description from


Baan Yoo Yen

In relation to a lot of research especially interview with the owner, our design intent has been interpreted as a simple but powerful word in Thai ‘Chan’ (literally meaning terrace) However, ‘Chan’ back to history of Thailand is incredibly meaningful as connection. As stated, ‘Chan’ connects people with people (three generations living in the same house) ‘Chan’ links people with nature (friend of nature) ‘Chan’ joins people with their surroundings (internal space interact with adjacent neighbour while maintaining privacy.)

Baan Yo Yen courtyard house in Thailand by TACHA_Design

Space planning has been adapted from traditional Thai residential architecture. The advantages of the spirit of traditional Thai house are to be retained to suit modern lifestyle such as sustainable strategies – the stack effect to move hot air up and out of the home by drawing cool air in through the ground floor (centre of the house) – daylighting through a skylight in the middle of the house. This makes an indirect connection with environment.

Baan Yo Yen courtyard house in Thailand by TACHA_Design

In order to eliminate the heat gain from south, a main staircase in the back of the house acts as the heat barrier as well as the exterior enclosure using double wall system with insulation to prevent heat entering to the living space.

Baan Yo Yen courtyard house in Thailand by TACHA_Design

The lower floor holds living room; semi-open to the environment, dining room, kitchen and guest bedroom. Again, there is ‘Chan’ connecting each area altogether with big tree in the middle.

Baan Yo Yen courtyard house in Thailand by TACHA_Design

The upper floor holds four bedrooms linking by the upper ‘Chan’ and sensing top of tree movement. One of the key elements is the main steel seven-metre-high entry door connecting and dividing up internal and external spaces with proper natural ventilation and daylighting.

Baan Yo Yen courtyard house in Thailand by TACHA_Design

Architects: TA-CHA Design
Location: Nonthaburi, Thailand
Design Team: Waranyu Makarabhirom, Sonthad Srisang
Contractor: Thaweemongkol2000 (Main contractor), Pichan (Interior contractor)
Area: 450sq.m.
Year: 2013

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TACHA_Design’s Baan Yo Yen house
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Red Bull Cliff Diving 2013 in Thailand

La semaine dernière, l’ultime étape de la saison de Red Bull Cliff Diving a eu lieu au milieu des paysages de Krabi en Thaïlande. Un évènement impressionnant remporté par le plongeur Artem Silchenko qui se dévoile dans une série de photographies à découvrir dans la suite de l’article.

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Moving school by Amadeo Bennetta and Dan LaRossa for Building Trust

These flat-packed schools have been designed for assembly in Southeast Asia by Californian architects Amadeo Bennetta and Dan LaRossa (+ slideshow).

MOVING school by Amadeo Bennetta and Dan LaRossa

Bennetta and LaRossa’s project was the winning entry for a competition launched by non-profit charity Building Trust to design a self-assembly educational facility for migrant and refugee communities on the border of Thailand and Burma.

MOVING school by Amadeo Bennetta and Dan LaRossa

The buildings are designed to be taken apart and reassembled several times over, and assembly drawings are available for anyone to download from the Building Trust website. These include cutting dimensions for the steel frame and instructions for both prefabricated elements and on-site construction.

MOVING school by Amadeo Bennetta and Dan LaRossa

They also lays out tips and suggestions for site preparation, time forecast and how many people each stage will need.

MOVING school by Amadeo Bennetta and Dan LaRossa

“The concept of the Moving school project is to provide displaced or informally settled communities with safe, well designed spaces that provide the core functions of both school buildings and community hubs,” said Louise Cole, co-founder of Building Trust.

MOVING school by Amadeo Bennetta and Dan LaRossa

The structure comprises a prefabricated steel frame, which sits elevated from the ground to minimise flooding.

MOVING school by Amadeo Bennetta and Dan LaRossa

The steel frame is covered with a white waterproof fabric and clad in locally crafted bamboo panels to allow light to filter inside.

MOVING school by Amadeo Bennetta and Dan LaRossa

The structure features a mono-pitched roof with a veranda, where the user enters the building through sliding bamboo doors.

MOVING school by Amadeo Bennetta and Dan LaRossa

The veranda is shaded to the front of the structure by thin bamboo blinds, which hang off the steel frame. A gap between the main roof and the secondary roof allows for passive ventilation.

MOVING school by Amadeo Bennetta and Dan LaRossa

David and Louise Cole co-founded Building Trust in 2010 to support educational and community-based projects in Asia, Europe, Africa and the Americas. For this project they followed the lead of home-assembly furniture specialist Ikea, which previously used its expertise in flat-pack design to redesign refugee shelters.

Here is some more information from Building Trust:


Open source design is all the rage at the moment but has there actually been any evidence that open source sharing has resulted in built projects for poverty stricken communities?

Building Trust recently went one step further in their efforts to make good design accessible to all by following the lead of flat pack furniture specialists IKEA. They have released assembly drawings for their first school building project that supports refugee and migrant communities. The PDF booklet that can be downloaded from their website not only gives the cutting dimensions for the steel frame and instructions for both prefabricated elements and on site construction. It also lays out tips and suggestions for site preparation, time forecast and how many people each stage will need.

MOVING school by Amadeo Bennetta and Dan LaRossa
Primary frame assembly- click for larger image

The MOVING school project was established by Building Trust to create solutions for public and school buildings to serve displaced refugee and migrant communities living on the Thai-Burmese border. The project sparked a design competition which saw the winning design by Amadeo Bennetta and Dan LaRossa built last year. The building design allowed for the school to be built and disassembled and constructed again many times over responding to the lack in land rights for the displaced Burmese communities.

MOVING school by Amadeo Bennetta and Dan LaRossa
Roof installation assembly- click for larger image

The assembly drawings were originally compiled to provide the school and community with a set of instructions for relocating the completed project. However, the demand from numerous other schools for a similar design has resulted in the assembly drawings pack and an online tool kit. Building trust hope the kit will inspire people to build

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and Dan LaRossa for Building Trust
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Kirimaya House by Architectkidd

The bulbous lower level of this residence in Thailand by local studio Architectkidd looks like it’s being squished by the rectilinear storey above it (+ slideshow).

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd

Architectkidd designed contrasting forms for the two floors of Kirimaya House in Khao Yai, north east of Bangkok.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd

“The site of the house in a wide open and horizontal landscape led us to re-think how typical houses are constructed,” said the architects.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd

Covered in vertical wood shingles around the top, the long first floor sticks out further on one side than the other.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd

The round volume beneath is clad using locally-fired clay tiles that are slightly staggered on top of each other to create the curving form.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd

Windows are cut out from the blob-like shape in horizontal strips, where the tiles curve inward to meet the frames.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd

The building is entered through double doors beneath the overhang of the first floor, which covers a stepped terrace that is used as a space for yoga.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd living room

Guest bedrooms, bathrooms and storage rooms are located within the ground-floor blob.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd

A central staircase leads to an open-plan living area in the cuboid above, which leads out on a terrace on one side of the blob’s roof.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd bathroom

The master bedroom is housed in the end of the cantilever, with the diagonal steel supports for the floating section breaking up the view through the full-height windows.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd terrace

Photography is by Luke Yeung and Manassak Senachak.

Here’s some more information from the architects:


Two contrasting structures are joined to form this private residence in Thailand.

The house located 150 kilometres north east of Bangkok, near Khao Yai. The site of the house in a wide open and horizontal landscape led us to re-think how typical houses are constructed.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd

Instead of repetitive structures and vertical enclosures containing interior functions, we were interested in how the interior spaces of the house – with their different uses, dimensions, levels and orientation – could respond differently to the surrounding outdoor spaces.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd

Each floor of the house has a distinct layout, geometry and structure. The upper floor contains the main living and bedroom areas that have a specific direction toward the outside views. In contrast, the lower floor is a circular space that is omni-directional in its orientation and responds to the different ways that people can approach the house by car and by foot.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd ground floor plan
Ground floor perspective plan – click for larger image

While each floor is distinct, they are co-dependent with each other, with the upper floor resting on and cantilevered from the lower floor. The lower floor, being close to the surrounding landscape, is built up from locally-fired clay tiles that are laid horizontally and stacked.

Kirimaya House by Architectkidd
First floor perspective plan – click for larger image

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Welcome To Thailand

Le français Thibaut Buccellato a réalisé cette jolie vidéo suite à son voyage en Thaïlande. Cette création de Nema Prod nous invite à découvrir de superbes paysages, des visages et des moments. Un joli film de vacances tourné au Canon 5D Mark III à découvrir en vidéo dans la suite de l’article.

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S3H House by all(zone)

Bangkok architects all(zone) rearranged the forms found in typical standardised housing to create this family home in the Thai capital (+ slideshow).

S3H House by all(zone)

The house is located in a middle class suburb of Bangkok and all(zone) based the design on the aesthetic favoured by local property developers.

S3H House by all(zone)

A pitched roof motif unites the house with the adjoining garage and also appears inside, where it can be seen in the hallway of the upper storey.

S3H House by all(zone)

Rectangular apertures punctuate the facade and the complex arrangement of internal walls, allowing light and views to permeate throughout the building.

S3H House by all(zone)

“The superimposing system of walls works together with various positioned openings to slice and light the space of the house into several layers,” said the architects.

S3H House by all(zone)

Pale render is used on the external and internal walls, while dark wood flooring and details create a contrast inside.

S3H House by all(zone)

all(zone) previously transformed two disused shops in Bangkok into live-work units by adding a patterned concrete brick facade.

S3H House by all(zone)

Other Bangkok projects featured on Dezeen include indoor tree houses built around structural columns and an apartment with an outdoor shower on its balcony.

S3H House by all(zone)

See more projects in Bangkok »

S3H House by all(zone)

Photography is by Piyawut Srisakul.

Here’s a brief description from the architects:


S3H House
Bangkok, Thailand / 2010-2013

dezeen_S3H House by all(zone)_18
Plan

The house is located in a typical middle-class suburb of Bangkok where most of the residences are made by real estate developer’s housing standard system. It, then, borrows and recomposes the most standard elements into a new language, yet remains assimilated to the context – an extra-ordinary. The superimposing system of walls works together with various positioned openings to slice and light the space of the house into several layers.

dezeen_S3H House by all(zone)_17
Section

Project data
Type: a single house
Location: Ramkamheng 118 Road, Bangkok
Total area: 550 sq.m.
Owner: Mingmitpattanakul’s Family
Architect: allzone, co.,ltd.
Project team: Rachaporn Choochuey, Sorawit Klaimark, Namkhang Anomarisi, Tharit Tossanaitada
Engineer: CM One co.,ltd.
Contractor: Sittanant Co.,Ltd.
Photographs: Piyawut Srisakul

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by all(zone)
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Bear Garage by Onion

The owners of a house designed to showcase their collection of toy bears have brought Thai design studio Onion back to extend the display cases into the garage (+ slideshow).

Bear Garage by Onion

Onion originally renovated the house at the Cha-Am Beach resort in Thailand to include cabinets for Be@rbrick ornamental bears and have now created a new exhibition area inside the garage for over seventy bears.

Bear Garage by Onion

The studio designed an L-shaped cabinet that takes up two walls of the garage, made from matte white laminated plastic and fronted with glass. “Be@rbrick cabinet brings light to Bear Garage,” Onion said. “It somehow transforms the entire space.”

Bear Garage by Onion

Faceted surfaces inside the cases extend outward to merge with the ceiling.

Bear Garage by Onion

Down the longest side, the height of the display space decreases from the top and bottom, plus the figures are spaced closer together towards the garage door.

Bear Garage by Onion

Paired with distorted black perspective lines across the sloping surfaces and progressively smaller shelves, the eye is tricked into thinking the bears increase in size.

Bear Garage by Onion

Each bear design sits on its own shelf with room to be accompanied by smaller versions, individually illuminated by an LED spotlight.

Bear Garage by Onion

Along the shorter wall, the bears are packed in tightly and shelves are spaced to accommodate different sized figurines.

Bear Garage by Onion

Additional strip LEDs are hidden in and behind the ledges. A large window allows the display to be viewed from the living room.

Bear Garage by Onion

More stories we’ve featured from Thailand include aerial photos that reveal the angular geometries of a rooftop swimming pool and a stairwell resembling a giant wedge of Swiss cheeseSee more architecture and design in Thailand »

Here is the project description from Onion:


Be@rbrick cabinet

In the longer part of the cabinet, Be@rbrick shelves are increasingly wider and further apart. Each shelf is individually customised. The first one, where Be@rbrick Detroit Metal City stands, has the same width as the 1000% Be@rbrick shoulder whereas the last shelf, where Daftpunk Be@rbrick is on display, is double that width. As an effect, the 1000% Be@rbricks queuing along on these shelves seem progressively smaller until its size is reduced by half at the corner of the space. The best viewpoint to perceive this is at the middle of the Garage where the cabinet elevation can be observed.

Bear Garage by Onion
Layout plan – click for larger image

The shorter side of the L-shape cabinet is a much simpler shelving system. The objective is to display as many Be@rbrick figures as possible. They stand close to each other and in continuity along the racks. Seventy figures at least are on display in this limited space of 4.8 metres high. It works as a background when the cabinet is observed from the diagonal viewpoint.

What unites the two design solutions is the idea of shopfront. The entire Be@rbrick cabinet is bright and white as if the toy figures are in luxurious window displays. LED strip-down-lights and LED strip-up-lights illuminate the shorter part of the cabinet. If the shelves are for 1000% Be@rbrick the number of strip-down-light will be more than those for 100% Be@rbrick. This is to uniform the illumination. For the longer part, there are two lighting systems, namely LED strip-down-lights and LED spot-lights. The strip-lights are between the ceiling and the rear wall. They are partly hidden from sight and partly shown through the edge of ceiling slope. Spot-lights are placed in the black square boxes that are increasingly larger in scales and in gaps through out to the corner of the space. Each light bulb precisely spots on each 1000% Be@rbrick. Lighting systems emphasise the effect of perceptual distortion.

Bear Garage by Onion
Elevation – click for larger image

Materials play an important part in the design. They are the matte white laminated plastic sheet, black mortises and transparent glass. On the frontal plane, the vertical mortises of six-millimetre wide are gradually spread out. These lines are the foreground of the cabinet. On the rear wall, a perspective of a room is drawn by using three-millimetre wide mortises. These thin lines are the pattern of conceptual depth. They make the cabinet appears deeper much less than set a background for the distortion of Be@rbrick size. Glass walls that envelop the entire cabinet has no frame. They are perpendicular. Again, the perception of Be@rbrick reflections is distorted at the corner of the room. Be@rbrick toys seem to have their double images that are thiner or fatter than themselves.

Be@rbrick cabinet brings light to Bear Garage. It somehow transforms the entire space. Cabinet ceiling that folds in various angles give shades to the whole Garage ceiling. Its steep slope extends itself from the inside to the outside of the cabinet. This darker shade of grey leads the gaze to a brighter space, that is Be@rbrick window display. Bear Garage, in this light, is far from being a car storage.

Bear Garage by Onion
Elevation

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by Onion
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Travel Love

Le créatif Christian Grewe nous propose de découvrir la vidéo « Travel Love », un superbe montage résumant en 4 minutes ses voyages réalisés dans 8 pays en Amérique du Sud et en Asie. De belles images de la Bolivie, du Vietnam, du Pérou ou de la Thaïlande à découvrir en vidéo dans la suite de l’article.

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