13MAR 2012
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Dutch Mountain / Denieuwegeneratie
Posted in Architecture - Houses by * FORMAKERS
The house is located on a historical agricultural plot amidst hayfields and woods in a nature reserve, a – for Dutch standards – hilly area.© Denieuwegeneratie
Although the plot has been overrun with small trees in time, it still bears the original character of the open field.
To minimize disturbance of the landscape and as a reference to the surrounding hilly terrain, the house is embedded in an artificial hill.© Denieuwegeneratie
At the same time, this answered the client’s demand for keeping his ecological footprint with the house to a minimum.
The embedding in the hill simultaneously functions as camouflage and as a blanket, hiding the house from view from the north side and using the earth as thermal insulation.© Denieuwegeneratie
One enters the house through cuts in the mountain, sided with panels of slowly corroding scrap steel.
On the south side, the house has been opened to a maximum.© Denieuwegeneratie
The grand glass facade is framed in timber, which guides the transition from the artificial to the natural.© Denieuwegeneratie
The canopy regulates sunshine through the seasons and allows for a large terrace along the full width of the house.
The terrace follows the split level of the ground floor, jumps up to the higher west façade creating a henhouse underneath.© Denieuwegeneratie
Finally, it curls back up to become the canopy. The frame is constructed out of lark wood, forested from the immediate surroundings and therefore making it a hyperlocal use of material.© Denieuwegeneratie
Detailing creates a seamless transition between the interior and the exterior: the concrete floor, window frames and terrace finishing are all flush and continuous from inside to outside.
The spatial structure of the house is a rectangular 12 x 19 meter open space.© Denieuwegeneratie
Steel cross the entire 12 meter width allowing great flexibility to the interior arrangement.© Denieuwegeneratie
Inside the hall-like space, the rooms are stacked in a disorderly manner and built out of light wooden structures, facilitating easy implementation of possible future changes. The interior can evolve along with its inhabitants, a young family, rooms being added or removed through time.© Denieuwegeneratie
There is a binary spatial experience in the house. Either you are in a room, with a cave-like atmosphere, daylight coming to you through deep cuts in the mountain – or you are in the large open space in front of the stacked rooms.© Denieuwegeneratie
This large space is oriented towards the 90 m2 glass facade which offers a spectacular view of the surrounding woods.
The contrast between shell and rooms is clearly visible.© Denieuwegeneratie
The concrete wall, needed to retain the mass of the mountain, is left unfinished. The welding joints of the steel spans are visible and the wood is untreated.© Denieuwegeneratie
Within this rough shell of untreated construction materials, the stack of rooms tells a completely different story: every room is finished by the inhabitants in a unique and colorful way, which expresses the individuality of the boxes.© Denieuwegeneratie
The design is an experiment in sustainable strategies in both architecture – the hardware – and the technical installations – the software – which have been designed by Arup Amsterdam. The software concept consists of photovoltaics, LED lighting, wood pellet heating in combination with low temperature heating, CO2 monitored ventilation, a grey water circuit and the use of smart domotics.© Denieuwegeneratie
The result is a house in which the total amount of energy produced exceeds its consumption: excess energy can be used for a electric car.
The house is bold and unpredictable: an experiment in sustainable strategies in concept, structure, material and technical installations.© Denieuwegeneratie
A house that blends quietly in its surroundings, but stands out with spatial surprises.
Description from the architects.© Denieuwegeneratie
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