Designed for a family of five, Villa J by Johan Sundberg Architecture is a generously sized residence located in southern Sweden.
An atrium, secluded by walls and a pool house, unites the interior and exterior spaces. On the ground floor are the master bedroom and several ample social spaces, as well as a winter garden, kitchen, sauna, etc. The upper floor is the children’s realm, comprising a living room, bedrooms and a sizable family bath.
The floor plan is an attempt to merge different room types without the bulk of unnecessary walls and doors, with spaces opening onto each other in clear sequence and often with subtle shifts. Villa J can provide room for socialising or seclusion – even simultaneously. The main axes of the plot, the house and the garden work in symphony to create multiple unorthodox angles. The composition draws on an aesthetic somewhere between collage and a more austere expression.
The load-bearing structure is constructed of wood and steel with a concrete intermediary floor slab. The façades are clad with brick, light grey render, stained pine and black aluminium.
The windows and doors are of stainless steel that offers superior structural properties.This means that even large, heavy duty sliding doors or wider windows can have an elegant design appearance.
Stainless steel profiles can be used in constructions of the highest aesthetic appeal and are particularly suitable for use in coastal areas. www.mestreraposa.com
© Johan Sundberg Architecture
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Montag, 19. März 2018
Montag, 5. März 2018
Enjoying Beautiful Views in all Directions
Sinbad Creek, Swatt Miers Architects
Sunsol, California, USA
Unique Views in Three Directions
The site enjoys unique views in three directions – a beautiful upslope hillside with mature oaks and a giant walnut tree to the east, a canyon ridge to the west, and Mission Peak to the south. The owners wanted a modern home that would embrace its beautiful setting, taking advantage of the many vistas that the site affords.
Accessed from a driveway at the northern edge of the property, the design is organized around a linear circulation spine that runs from north to south. Major spaces are placed diagonally across the spine from each other, creating unique diagonal vistas through the house.
Ceiling heights vary, from a low, compressed entry to a two-story dining room, bringing additional
spatial drama to the composition. The alternating spaces enjoy hillside and canyon- ridge views, while the rooms at the south end of the linear spine, the living room on the ground floor and the second floor master bedroom, enjoy beautiful views of Mission Peak in the distance. Generous patios and terraces are located on the east and west sides of the house, for outdoor living and for enjoying the unique views in all directions.
The form of the house is at the same time simple and strong, with a stucco-clad vertical bathroom and future elevator core anchoring the composition on the west side. Major spaces, with wall-to-wall glass, flank both sides of the vertical core. Deep, cantilevered roof and terrace overhangs frame views and visually extend the interior spaces to the exterior.
At the south end of the building, a double cantilever, with the upper level roof overhanging the second floor and the second floor overhanging the first, creates a dramatic visual thrust in the direction of the distant view of Mission Peak.
Unique views with windows and doors #wood #woodaluminium by www.mestreraposa.com
images ©trends.archiexpo
Sunsol, California, USA
Unique Views in Three Directions
The site enjoys unique views in three directions – a beautiful upslope hillside with mature oaks and a giant walnut tree to the east, a canyon ridge to the west, and Mission Peak to the south. The owners wanted a modern home that would embrace its beautiful setting, taking advantage of the many vistas that the site affords.
Accessed from a driveway at the northern edge of the property, the design is organized around a linear circulation spine that runs from north to south. Major spaces are placed diagonally across the spine from each other, creating unique diagonal vistas through the house.
Ceiling heights vary, from a low, compressed entry to a two-story dining room, bringing additional
spatial drama to the composition. The alternating spaces enjoy hillside and canyon- ridge views, while the rooms at the south end of the linear spine, the living room on the ground floor and the second floor master bedroom, enjoy beautiful views of Mission Peak in the distance. Generous patios and terraces are located on the east and west sides of the house, for outdoor living and for enjoying the unique views in all directions.
The form of the house is at the same time simple and strong, with a stucco-clad vertical bathroom and future elevator core anchoring the composition on the west side. Major spaces, with wall-to-wall glass, flank both sides of the vertical core. Deep, cantilevered roof and terrace overhangs frame views and visually extend the interior spaces to the exterior.
At the south end of the building, a double cantilever, with the upper level roof overhanging the second floor and the second floor overhanging the first, creates a dramatic visual thrust in the direction of the distant view of Mission Peak.
Unique views with windows and doors #wood #woodaluminium by www.mestreraposa.com
images ©trends.archiexpo
Donnerstag, 15. Februar 2018
A House Built Around a Tree
MARCUS BEACH HOUSE
BARK Design Architects, Australia
An Australian house built around a tree!
With the design of the Marcus Beach House, BARK Design Architects accomplished something rather curious. Throughout the numerous houses we have seen houses that were built according to the topography of the site they were built on or in accordance with the surrounding environment. The Marcus Beach House has been built around a tree!
In fact, the Australian house is a celebration of nature. If the house is centered around a 50-year-old tree, it also has layers of transparency, of volumes covered with a glass-clad and polycarbonate walls that give them a sheer sense of lightness and filters the natural breeze. Outdoor and indoor spaces are intricately connected by wooden paths leading to the numerous parts of the house and a large, covered patio.
The result is a house that conveys a great feeling of comfort inside of a structure that is sustainable, simple and well-connected to its environment. The flourishing natural surroundings of the house provide subtle shade and passive ventilation, while wood-slat screens protect the house from excessive sunlight. In the end, we have a complex structure that is both social and integrated to
nature which is a working combo for us!
The house’s living spaces are closely connected to the surrounding landscape through large doors and operable windows.
Your specialist in windows and doors of all type of sizes, materials and modern systems:
www.mestreraposa.com
BARK Design Architects, Australia
An Australian house built around a tree!
With the design of the Marcus Beach House, BARK Design Architects accomplished something rather curious. Throughout the numerous houses we have seen houses that were built according to the topography of the site they were built on or in accordance with the surrounding environment. The Marcus Beach House has been built around a tree!
In fact, the Australian house is a celebration of nature. If the house is centered around a 50-year-old tree, it also has layers of transparency, of volumes covered with a glass-clad and polycarbonate walls that give them a sheer sense of lightness and filters the natural breeze. Outdoor and indoor spaces are intricately connected by wooden paths leading to the numerous parts of the house and a large, covered patio.
The result is a house that conveys a great feeling of comfort inside of a structure that is sustainable, simple and well-connected to its environment. The flourishing natural surroundings of the house provide subtle shade and passive ventilation, while wood-slat screens protect the house from excessive sunlight. In the end, we have a complex structure that is both social and integrated to
nature which is a working combo for us!
The house’s living spaces are closely connected to the surrounding landscape through large doors and operable windows.
Your specialist in windows and doors of all type of sizes, materials and modern systems:
www.mestreraposa.com
Dienstag, 23. Januar 2018
Huge Windows Connected to the Tropical Landscape
Luxury Villas along the Coast
MIA Design Studio, Vietnam
Offering a multi-dimensional landscape with infinity pools and tropical gardens, the villas themselves are comprised of a series of refined spaces, each instilling a feeling of openness due to huge windows and doors made in aluminium with highest insulation standard and connected to the tropical landscape .
At the core, a linear communal living space is made up of the dining room and lounge which opens at both sides leading towards the residence and towards the swimming pool in. To maximize the project’s efficiency, the master-plan was well organized but the way was too narrow with high density. Within this condition, the team’s goal was to make a creative and effective design to not only satisfied maximum privacy but also create extra benefits from natural voids and gardens.
Windows and Doors with maximum sizes made in aluminium: www.mestreraposa.com
MIA Design Studio, Vietnam
Offering a multi-dimensional landscape with infinity pools and tropical gardens, the villas themselves are comprised of a series of refined spaces, each instilling a feeling of openness due to huge windows and doors made in aluminium with highest insulation standard and connected to the tropical landscape .
At the core, a linear communal living space is made up of the dining room and lounge which opens at both sides leading towards the residence and towards the swimming pool in. To maximize the project’s efficiency, the master-plan was well organized but the way was too narrow with high density. Within this condition, the team’s goal was to make a creative and effective design to not only satisfied maximum privacy but also create extra benefits from natural voids and gardens.
Windows and Doors with maximum sizes made in aluminium: www.mestreraposa.com
Montag, 8. Januar 2018
In Dialogue with the Exterior
Villa Vigne - Amid Stone and The Sky
Baillargues, France
Architect : François Clavel
In dialogue with the exterior, with low-key shapes and pure profiles - this is the DNA of a villa owned by a family in the Gard region.
Built in 2011 on a 2,000 sq.m hillside plot, the villa is situated in an area where mazets once stood - small stone houses used in the past by city-dwellers who wanted a pied à terre in the garrigue (dry moorland). Now populated with villas, the hillside has kept its rural identity - covered in loose stones, distinctive plots planted with pines and olive trees and thick stone walls separating one home from the next.
A House looking to the Exterior
A fundamentally Mediterranean transparency is achieved by the wide bay windows with the constant interchange of exterior and interior light. The area is divided into a vast, lofty kitchen, a space for a fireplace and bookshelves, two children’s rooms and a master bedroom with en-suite and an office. The rear wall of the lounge is lit by a fine atrium window. The garden is designed as a half-patio “to avoid creating a break between the house and nature”, explained François. A deck is built into the swimming pool just in front of the house, creating an additional living space.
From an insulation standpoint, the villa has been fitted with heat pumps and heated and cooled flooring. Bedrooms facing west are protected from the rain or sun by front overhangs - two elements with unrestrained force in the Gard. To the south of the plot, a spa corner is built against the outside wall to recreate a constructed element and match the house.
Wide windows and doors, atrium windows with the maximum of insulation for your individual project: www.mestreraposa.com
Baillargues, France
Architect : François Clavel
In dialogue with the exterior, with low-key shapes and pure profiles - this is the DNA of a villa owned by a family in the Gard region.
Built in 2011 on a 2,000 sq.m hillside plot, the villa is situated in an area where mazets once stood - small stone houses used in the past by city-dwellers who wanted a pied à terre in the garrigue (dry moorland). Now populated with villas, the hillside has kept its rural identity - covered in loose stones, distinctive plots planted with pines and olive trees and thick stone walls separating one home from the next.
A House looking to the Exterior
A fundamentally Mediterranean transparency is achieved by the wide bay windows with the constant interchange of exterior and interior light. The area is divided into a vast, lofty kitchen, a space for a fireplace and bookshelves, two children’s rooms and a master bedroom with en-suite and an office. The rear wall of the lounge is lit by a fine atrium window. The garden is designed as a half-patio “to avoid creating a break between the house and nature”, explained François. A deck is built into the swimming pool just in front of the house, creating an additional living space.
From an insulation standpoint, the villa has been fitted with heat pumps and heated and cooled flooring. Bedrooms facing west are protected from the rain or sun by front overhangs - two elements with unrestrained force in the Gard. To the south of the plot, a spa corner is built against the outside wall to recreate a constructed element and match the house.
Wide windows and doors, atrium windows with the maximum of insulation for your individual project: www.mestreraposa.com
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