A green clearing
surrounded by forest was the only context for the proposed small house.
Hence the idea
to “carve out” a piece of the grass-covered site, move it up and treat it as
the roofing to arrange all the required functions underneath.
When the whole
was ready, the client came up with another request, to create some space for a
small recording studio and a conservatory.
The latter was
obtained by linking the ground floor with the grassy roof through an “incision”
in the green plane and “bending” the incised fragment down, inside the
building.
This procedure
turned the roof into an atrium, as the only way to reach it was through the
interior of the house.
As opposed,
however, to a typical atrium, the newly-created space has all the advantages of
an outer garden while remaining a safe, internal zone within the building.
This way, a new
type of house was created, and its designation — outrial — is to convey the
idea of an atypical atrium which is part of both the interior and the exterior
of the building.
The studio was
created in a similar way as the conservatory, but in order to ensure work
comfort for a rock musician, it was isolated from the rest of the house by
shifting it upwards.
Location: Ksiazenice, Poland
Architect: KWK Promes
Principal Designer: Robert
Konieczny
Project Team: Marcin Jojko
Structural Engineering: Jaroslaw
Kaminski
Area: 1,440 m2 Year: 2004-2007
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