Source: Jürg Zimmermann archdaily.com |
Trublerhütte, Schlieren, Zurich, Switzerland, 2008 designed by Rossetti + Wyss Architekten
The country house is located on a slope surrounded entirely by trees. The proximity to downtown, the ease of transportation and the possibility of parking make this idyllic setting to continue to be the ideal place for social gatherings. -- ArchDaily
Source: Takuro Yamamoto Architects archdaily.com |
F-White, Kashiwa city, Japan, 2009 designed by Takuro Yamamoto Architects
What the architect invented, was to put the rectangular courtyard at an unusual oblique anglerather than a right angle. Locating courtyard in this way makes spaces around the courtyard can have enough room to stay, and be chained each other directly at their corners, without aisle -- ArchDaily
Source: Van den Pauwert Architecten |
Witlox Van den Boomen new Headquarters, Waalre, The Netherlands, 2011 designed by Van den Pauwert Architecten
a compact, square building that complements the villa. A point symmetry at the heart of the building brings together all the sight lines and contacts. The top two floors do not favour any particular direction. -- ArchDaily
Source: Pia Johnson archdaily.com |
Quartette Haus, Melbourne, Australia, 2011 designed by Bluebottle
There are 52 places available in the Haus for each performance. Seated in two circles about a slowly revolving central performance space, no member of the audience is more than two meters from the performers. The proximity of the listener to the performer accentuates the visceral theatre of live – string or other acoustic – quartet performance. -- ArchDaily
Source: archdaily.com |
Luminous House, Kagawa, Japan, 2011 designed by Shinichi Ogawa & Associates
The white house of one-story is located in a rural landscape. Its spatial composition is really simple, being closed toward the outside by 3 vertical surfaces and a horizontal plane, has a semitransparent wall and a tunnel as the entrance in the principal façade. Thanks to this glass wall, sunshine reaches into the rooms during the daytime, and the house changes to a luminous box in the darkness. -- ArchDaily
Source: Kuo-Min Lee archdaily.com |
Lightbox, Taipei City, Taiwan, 2011 designed by Hsuyuan Kuo Architect & Associates
The site is located by a lakeside park surrounded by the forest in Chu-pei, Hsinchu County. Facing the lake in front, the building extends its space into the nature and captures the greenery into the room through its glass panels. To facilitate a better view, the designers raise the house one meter higher. At night, the glass box transforms itself into a luminous cube floating on the water. -- ArchDaily
Source: Felix Krumbhlotz archdaily.com |
Pavilion Siegen, Siegen, Germany, 2012 designed by Ian Shaw Architekten
The 12 x 12 m structure conforms to a strict proportional grid that determines both the position and heights of the walls, as well as the shuttering joints and fenestration divisions. The 3 x 3m door panels – built by the client’s engineering company, and weighing 340 kilos per door – pivot on bespoke spindles, allowing each to be opened with the push of a single finger. -- ArchDaily
Source: Jeroen Musch archdaily.com |
Mirror House, De Eenvoud, Almere, The Netherlands, 2013 designed by Johan Selbing + Anouk Vogel
The Mirror House is a private villa with a facade consisting entirely of reflective glass, which acts as a camouflage and an obstruction of the view of its interior. The floorplan has been designed to be as compact as possible, with the possibility to adapt to different lifestyles. -- ArchDaily
Source: Santos-Díez archdaily.com |
Maritime Station Vilanova de Arousa, Rúa Porto do Cabo, Vilanova de Arousa, Pontevedra, Spain, 2013 designed by 2C Arquitectos
The proposal is the configuration of a serene space overlooking the sea and westward facing. It is a fully glass-enclosed space, under a surround of dark concrete and protected from noise and bustle by a wooden box which contains all the services. -- ArchDaily
Source: Fernando Guerra | FG+SG archdaily.com |
The Pavilion, Faro District, Portugal, 2015 designed by Marlene Uldschmidt Architects
The Pavilion has been designed as a modern day folly, is constructed of timber and glass and is located in the grounds of an existing detached villa in the Algarve. -- ArchDaily
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