[ad_1]
Phong House/Dom Architect Studio
- area:
190 sqm
Year:
2024
manufacturer: Jordan, Matsushita, tower lion, Thailand SCG, Xingfa
Text description provided by the architect. The design brief was to build a small house for a young family of 3 members, including husband and wife and a 5-year-old girl. Soon they would have more members, but they didn’t want to build ready-made bedrooms and let them sit unused. They also wanted construction costs to be kept to a minimum.
When approaching the site where the house was built we realized that the local architectural designs here have a common structure, always with a large front yard followed by a long porch at the transition into the house. Within the living space, a door system demarcates the boundaries between interior and exterior. From here we researched and proposed a solution that would always reuse the “structure” and re-create the spaces of the house.
We studied the creation of a “structure” from the general structure of a country house to a simpler structure, the arrangement of internal and external elements between public and private. From there, we arranged the structure in multiple scales, with varying depths and heights. This solution creates a strong connection between the spaces within the house by clearly demarcating elements between public and private or interior and exterior, thus creating the need for independent spaces (bedrooms) in the future. The future will continue effectively in the public spaces while still ensuring connections between spaces within the house.
Calculate ventilation, lighting and viewing solutions based on the structural characteristics of the space. The front door system opens to the maximum extent to take advantage of the house’s cool southerly breezes without creating convection. Thanks to the door opening system on the roof and at the back of the house, air flows from bottom to top and front to back.
We want the new generation’s houses to still retain the traditional features of previous generations. The spaces of the house will change according to future needs but still retain the nature of the vernacular housing structure that we built in the house.
[ad_2]
Source link