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Fabbrica Bergen by Tjep.

출처: www.dezeen.com 

*In Bergen we show materials instead of using painted surfaces.
*It’s not time for Bling Bling anymore, people want more authenticity and less entertainment.

Fabbrica Bergen by Tjep

Diners can climb into wooden booths modelled on railway carriages in the second Fabbrica pizzeria completed by Dutch design studio Tjep.

Fabbrica Bergen by Tjep

Located in the coastal village of Bergen, the restaurant repeats the most successful features from the earlier Rotterdam restaurant, including its mosaic-patterned pizza oven.

Fabbrica Bergen by Tjep

The wooden seating booths line one wall of the Bergen dining room, featuring suspended tabletops and chandeliers.

Fabbrica Bergen by Tjep

Wood for the oven is stored on a wall of criss-crossing shelves, where electrical socket clusters are mounted on large red squares.

Fabbrica Bergen by Tjep

You can compare this restaurant to its predecessor by following this link to our earlier story, or see all our stories about Tjep. here.

Fabbrica Bergen by Tjep

Photography is by Yannic Alidarso.

Fabbrica Bergen by Tjep

Here’s some more explanation from Frank Tjepkema:


After the success of Fabbrica Rotterdam (completed in 2005) we were asked to design a second Fabbrica in the famous costal artist village of Bergen in The Netherlands.

Fabbrica Bergen by Tjep

We revisited several of the original elements, for example the train cabins with a new look and feel, we like the concept for it’s intimacy and romanticism for there is nothing more relaxing and engaging then enjoying a nice dinner on a train while looking at nice landscapes.

Fabbrica Bergen by Tjep

This installation is lifted from the ground and suggests travel and movement.

Fabbrica Bergen by Tjep

The large Pizza Oven covered with Bisazza tiles is an absolute eye-catcher and the very industrial wood containers hold all the wood to fuel the oven and all the electricity to fuel the lights!

Fabbrica Bergen by Tjep

As for the general looks we decided to take a more earthly and less gloss and shine approach as compared to Fabbrica Rotterdam.

Fabbrica Bergen by Tjep

In Bergen we show materials instead of using painted surfaces.

Fabbrica Bergen by Tjep

We did this to be more in touch with the economic context of the moment.

Fabbrica Bergen by Tjep

It’s not time for Bling Bling anymore, people want more authenticity and less entertainment.

Fabbrica Bergen by Tjep


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Urban Hut by Takehiko Nez Architects

출처: www.dezeen.com

예전 사생대회나 초등, 중학교 미술시간에 그림을 그리다 보면, 나는 초반 스케치를 할때에는 항상 의욕있게 그리고 또 잘 그린 그림축에 끼곤 했다. 하지만 스케치에 수채화나 유화로 색을 입히는 순간부터 나의 관심과 집중도는 현저히 떨어져 버리고, 결국 완성된 그림은 그저 그렇고 그런 그림 중에 하나로 보이기 다반사였다. 결국 미술에 관심이 있으면서도 나를 미술전공으로 올인하게 하지 않은 이유이기도 했다.(정말 다행이다 생각한다.) 
이와 비슷한 마음일 듯 싶은데, 공사현장에서 머무르다 보면, 디자인안이 서서히 형태가 드러나기 시작할때, 뼈대가 서고 대략의 윤각이 시각적으로 인지가 되기 시작하며 스케일과 공간의 느낌들을 몸으로 느끼기 시작할때가 오히려 완성된 안을 볼때보다도 더 경이로운 기분을 느낄때가 많이 있다. 나의 취향이 구조미를 선호하는 이유도 있지만, 구조가 가진 그 순수한 미학, 아무것도 숨기지 않고, 형태가 만들어지기 위해 필요한 힘의 흐름들을 솔직히 드러낼때, 마치 이것저것 치장하지 않고 솔직하고 진실한 사람과 마주 대하는 그런 믿음까지 생긴다.

아쉬운 것은 스케치를 했으면 색을 입혀야 하는 것이고, 공사의 마무리는 깔끔하게 모든 것을 숨긴채, 판판한 벽을 덧입혀야 한다는 사실이다.
나중에 괜찮은 클라이언트를 만나면, 노출된 형태의 피니쉬를 꼭 해봐야겠다 생각에 생각은 거듭하고 있었지만, 이렇게 남이 한 것을 보게 될줄이야. 
내 혼자 이상과 공상을 넘나드며 생각했던 개념을 누군가는 벌써 한번 해봤다는 사실을 알때는 참 찝찝함과 궁금함에 가슴 두근거림이 교차한다. 

이 프로젝트는 내가 생각한것 보다 더 거칠게 드러내는 전략을 사용해서 언뜻 너무 했다 싶은 생각도 들 정도 일 수도 있지만, 이런 디자인을 수용한 젊은 클라이언트와 디자인한 건축가에게 박수를 보낸다.  

 

dezeen_Urban Hut by Takehiko Nez Architects

The stairwell ascending through the centre of this Tokyo house is illuminated from a skylight and glows through translucent glass partitions.

dezeen_Urban Hut by Takehiko Nez Architects

Designed by Japanese firm Takehiko Nez Architects, the three-storey residence has a stark interior of unfinished plywood and streaky white paint.

dezeen_Urban Hut by Takehiko Nez Architects

The house is named Urban Hut and has an open-plan layout on each floor that will accommodate a brother and sister.

dezeen_Urban Hut by Takehiko Nez Architects

You can also see more projects that look like they aren’t quite finished by clicking here.

dezeen_Urban Hut by Takehiko Nez Architects

Photography is by Takumi Ota.

dezeen_Urban Hut by Takehiko Nez Architects

The following text is from Takehiko Nez:


Urban Hut

The young clients, sister and brother, lost parents at their teens, lived in the downtown Tokyo. Modest, rough and tough house to have a strong hold on the changes of the times like weeds is suitable for them.

dezeen_Urban Hut by Takehiko Nez Architects

The house without finish on façade stands in disordered scenery of typical downtown.
It was required maximum floor in the compact box on 30 square meters’ site and basic performance as a private house.

dezeen_Urban Hut by Takehiko Nez Architects

The central staircase with the roof light sends sunlight to each spaces through the studs and stairs rising to the top floor without a landing to the middle floor.

dezeen_Urban Hut by Takehiko Nez Architects

The partitions of translucent glass and plywood give the adequate relationship and privacy in the two completely different rhythm and pattern of life.

dezeen_Urban Hut by Takehiko Nez Architects

It can be called an urban vernacular house that is compactly made by the raw material like a corrugated cardboard house, made with skin and born like a hut, stacked with thin objects and narrow spaces in the tiny lot.

dezeen_Urban Hut by Takehiko Nez Architects

If the house’s magnetism is not greatest at completion but greater gradually for the lifespan, creator’s role of the house should be inherited from architects to residents to accustom itself to their lifestyle.

dezeen_Urban Hut by Takehiko Nez Architects

Tolerance letting residents’ imagination intervene is designed as stacking spaces with half scale, shallow blank gap, and incomplete finishes. It is pleased that clients are managing to live comfortably with unexpected discovery beyond the pre-established imagination.

dezeen_Urban Hut by Takehiko Nez Architects

Architect: Takehiko Nez Architects

dezeen_Urban Hut by Takehiko Nez Architects

Status: completed July 2011
Location: Tokyo, Japan

dezeen_Urban Hut by Takehiko Nez Architects

Collaborators:
Structure: ASA
Contractor: Shinei

dezeen_Urban Hut by Takehiko Nez Architects

Site area: 30.37sqm
Total floor area: 44.26sqm

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The House with Balls by Matharoo Associates

출처: www.dezeen.com

한국전통건축에서 보이던 들창이 인도에서 재현되어 있기에 퍼왔다. 콘크리트 덩어리들의 느낌은 그리 썩 좋지 않으나, 땅속에 뿌리 박힌 암석과도 같은 표현과 들창의 리듬감이 적절히 대비가 되며 조화를 이루는 모습으로 보인다.


The House with Balls by Matharoo Associates

Photographer Edmund Sumner has shared with us his photos of this house that cost just $12,000 to build by Matharoo Associates in Ahmadabad, India, featuring shutters weighted with concrete balls. Update: this project is included in Dezeen Book of Ideas, which is on sale now for £12.

The House with Balls by Matharoo Associates

Called The House with Balls, the building was designed for the owner of an aquarium shop and houses four huge tanks for breeding fish.

The House with Balls by Matharoo Associates

It also doubles as a weekend retreat.

The House with Balls by Matharoo Associates

The long narrow main room is lined on both sides by shutters, opening on one side to the garden and over the tanks on the other.

The House with Balls by Matharoo Associates

The concrete balls dip into the water on the tank side when the shutters are opened.

The House with Balls by Matharoo Associates

The project has been awarded the AR House 2010 award.

The House with Balls by Matharoo Associates

All photographs are copyright Edmund Sumner.

The House with Balls by Matharoo Associates

More about Edmund Sumner’s photographs on Dezeen:

New Architecture in Japan (March 2010)
The Delhi Art Gallery by Morphogenesis (December 2009)
Pearl Academy of Fashion by Morphogenesis (September 2009)
Takasugi-an by Terunobu Fujimori (March 2009)
Yakisugi House by Terunobu Fujimori (March 2009)
Colour Factory by Dan Brill Architects (February 2009)
Outside the Box (June 2008)
Kait Workshop by Junya Ishigami Architects (May 2008)
Gravesend public toilets by Plastik Architects (January 2008)
Boiler Suit by Thomas Heatherwick (August 2007)

The House with Balls by Matharoo Associates

Here’s some more information about the building, written by Rhys Williams:


Ahmadabad India
Matharoo Associates

THE $100 per SQM HOUSE WITH BALLS

Scooped out of a plot of farmland twenty minutes outside Ahmedabad city, this house has been built for an aquarium shop owner to function as a place to breed fish as well as to serve as a weekend retreat.

The House with Balls by Matharoo Associates

Its design is centred around four fish breeding tanks and an observation room which could double up as a living room.

The House with Balls by Matharoo Associates

Every aspect of this design is set out to strip expense from the project; be it using 125mm thin concrete walls with standard concrete, one duct space for its three bathrooms, doors and windows made by pressing GI sheets or using bent rods to function as a handle and locking aldrop.

The House with Balls by Matharoo Associates

On approaching the entry from the country lane one finds the entrance nondescript and hidden in the scrub.

The House with Balls by Matharoo Associates

The mandatory margin required is used for the tank space – while the walls of the plot and house are used as a retention structure for the tanks.

The House with Balls by Matharoo Associates

These tanks are enclosed by glass windows which runs the entire length of the living space, the added bonus being that the glass works out cheaper than a concrete wall, more so for aquarium manufacturers!

The House with Balls by Matharoo Associates

On entering the house one steps up into a corridor opening to a small powder room on the left, followed by a choice to either take the left into the bedroom, or to carry on down directly into the long living space.

The House with Balls by Matharoo Associates

The layout of the house is such that several differing views of the water bodies are provided; in the bedroom space, the sitting ledge is just above the water level and looks down the long length of the pools; while the living space affords the inhabitant an uninterrupted view over the tanks when the windows are open, and view of the fish through below-the-sill glass windows.

The House with Balls by Matharoo Associates

Resting half-sunken under the ground level, negating the need for foundations, the long concrete-box house splits the plot space into two distinct yet continuously mingling spaces; it opens on one side to the garden and to the four nine thousand litre fish breeding tanks on the other.

The House with Balls by Matharoo Associates

The living area can be opened to either of these two spaces by top hung metal shutters which extend at eye level through the entire length of the walls.

The House with Balls by Matharoo Associates

When closed it is a 13m long and 3.6m wide space rendered by the light through the fish tanks. On opening the shutters this linear space transforms completely into an infinite one perpendicular to its original direction.

The House with Balls by Matharoo Associates

The metal shutters are held by handmade concrete baubles, the cheapest counterweights possible; they either swing in the wind when windows are partially open or dip out of view into the lily padded pools when the windows are fully open making the house animated in use or even without.

The House with Balls by Matharoo Associates

The concrete frame around the window plays multiple roles; as a seat from the garden side, steps for children to climb on from the garden or jump to from the terrace, a weather protection device while also providing a rat & snake proof section.

The House with Balls by Matharoo Associates

It starts serving as a bar counter with the attached kitchen platform for larger gatherings. The grassy knoll that rises in front of the long opening bears under it a bio-gas plant, fifty thousand litres of rain water storage, and an earth heat exchange tube.

The House with Balls by Matharoo Associates

Click above for larger image

Back through the shrubbery and fields the house assumes a squat position; the curving wall to one side allows one to walk up a gentle slope on to the terrace running over the length of the house. The weekenders enjoy the feeling of floating over a bed of lily petals while being weighed down by the baubles.

The House with Balls by Matharoo Associates

Click above for larger image

Project title HOUSE WITH BALLS
Location Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India
Design year(s): 2003
Construction year(s): 2004
Architects Matharoo Associates
Principal(s) in charge: Gurjit Singh Matharoo
Project team: Gurjit Singh Matharoo- principal architect, Hardik
Pandit – trainee
Client(s): Mr. Mahesh Mohatta
Consultants:
Structural engineer(s) Mr. Rajendra Singh Matharoo
Interior designer(s): Matharoo Associates
Landscape architect(s): Matharoo Associates
Others: -
General contractor: Shriram Builders, Ahmedabad
Program: Living room, bedroom, caretaker’s room, 4 fish
breeding tanks, kitchen, 3 toilets, 1 parking.
Structural system: Concrete Raft and Walls
Major materials: Reinforced Cement Concrete
Site area: Approx. 530 m2
Building area: Approx. 130 m2
Total floor area: Approx. 130 m2
Cost of construction: Approx. $100/m2 – $12,000 (in 2004)



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