Showing posts with label Architech. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Architech. Show all posts

Berrima House by Park + Associates

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      Buc Tường nhận powerful tôi with strip do not gian is one of the following features the time in any Ngoi Nha This is designed to Khuyến khích actually interactive xa hoi and connect to direct quan. Chia ba the length of Down it, it is successfully chia 2 Cánh Chảy complete change with San Vườn, be described by a vi chu height full Window not.
     Khu Vực Xã such as people bai hat, một uong and Nghiên look up room Suon half Phia following Ngoi Nha, dmart là locations regulations cao of Minh on the number of encrypted score maximum is not BI có thể again of traversal xanh Xung around. regular Got of bởi context quan that improved Thiện using usage way that to open ra one clock bởi spa and Bể bởi do not Dây Cực is one Suon DOC.
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Stacking Green by Vo Trong Nghia Architects

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    Vo Trong Nghia Architects designed Stacking Green, a house located in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.
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    The house, designed for a couple in their thirties and their mother, is a typical tube house constructed on the plot 4m wide and 20m deep.The front and back facades are composed of layers of concrete planters cantilevered from two sidewalls.To water plants, the automatic irrigation pipes inside the planters were installed. Rainwater is collected in the tank and pumped up for this irrigation system.
    This green facade and roof garden protect its inhabitants from direct sunlight, street noise and pollution.According to the post-occupancy measurement of the indoor environment, wind flows throughout in the house thanks to the porous façades and 2 skylights. This result was already proven by the behavior of the inhabitants; they scarcely use the air conditioner even in the tropical climate, their electricity fees are just 25USD per month, thanks to the wind flow and other passive design methods.
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Design: Vo Trong Nghia 
Architects Photography: Hiroyuki Oki

Alexandra Residence by naturehumaine

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     Customer priority is to maximize natural light in the living / working in their new area of Montreal Mile - Ex . This was made challenging by the east - west orientation of many cherished . However, our design fills even the core of the house with light through the implementation of a 2 -story light well running the length of the south side of the house . More light is reflected in this well lit office space by the customer - a white mass which sits atop the northern edge lit . Space on the second floor also benefits from a good morning 's light , the wall adjacent to it is completely made ​​of glass and a piece of floor to ceiling frosted glass gives a very soft light into the bathroom .

     Expressive facade back of the house is determined by the angular geometry of floating steel box . Front facade , however , is a major component of the bricks to match the heritage character of the neighborhood . Two apertures disjuncted break brick facade and is lined with aluminum . As only one side of enameled brick , a random combination of the blocks forward and backward facing was placed to create a more dynamic facade .
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Findlay Residence by Splyce Design

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    The Findlay Residence is located on a flat, irregular shaped site in North Vancouver. Designed for a young active family of four, the principal living spaces of the home are organized around a two storey exterior void within the main volume of the building. Planted with bamboo and glazed on either side, this cutout serves to create separation between spaces without fully disengaging them from one another. On the main floor, the bamboo garden subtly divides the kitchen/dining space from the living area- a dynamic that serves the family well with their busy and differing schedules. On the upper floor, the tall bamboo from below screens the master bedroom sleeping and change area from its adjoining bathroom. These two spaces are connected with a glazed bridge.
Light and shadow animate the white walls by the passing sun as it enters through the large skylight above the central staircase. Windows and doors are calibrated to capture the natural light and views to the garden and mountains beyond. On the building’s west elevation, large sliding glass doors activate the adjacent patios allowing space to flow from inside to out, and all at once the space becomes pavilion-like with its ample porosity. In contrast, the street elevation on the north reads more formally with its cedar and concrete walls stretching out horizontally across the site and into the landscape. Due to site constraints, there is no usable back yard, so the front serves as a playing field for the client’s two boys.
     A simple interior palette consisting of concrete floors, white lacquered and oak cabinets and white walls serve to strengthen the clarity and purity of the spaces and allows the vibrancy of the the natural environment and landscape features to pervade.
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