"Recognizing the need is the primary condition for design." – 찰스 임스(Charles Eames)
복잡함 속의 질서: 사르바스바 타워의 혁신적 접근 Spasm Design wraps 12-storey home in terracotta facade
사르바스바 타워는 인도 뭄바이의 복잡한 도심 속에서 눈에 띄는 건축물입니다. 스파즘 디자인(Spasm Design)은 붉은 테라코타 외관을 통해 주변의 회색 건물들 사이에서 차별화를 시도했습니다. 이 건물은 자연과의 교감을 강조한 설계를 통해 도시 생활의 새로운 가능성을 제시합니다.
프로젝트 개요와 설계 컨셉
사르바스바 타워는 자연과의 조화와 수직적 생활 방식을 중심으로 설계되었습니다. 건물의 측면에 배치된 기하학적 빈 공간은 자연광이 내부로 유입될 수 있게 하고, 발코니와 테라스를 통해 실내외의 경계를 흐릿하게 만듭니다. 테라코타 패널로 외관을 감싼 디자인은 유지 관리가 용이하며, 도심 속에서도 자연을 느낄 수 있는 공간을 제공합니다.
내외부 디자인과 지속 가능성
내부 공간은 발코니와 테라스를 통해 자연광을 최대한 활용할 수 있도록 설계되었습니다. 붉은 테라코타 외관은 기하학적 디자인과 조화를 이루며, 지속 가능성을 강조합니다. 기하학적 빈 공간을 통해 채광이 극대화되며, 나선형 계단과 발코니가 실내외를 자연스럽게 연결합니다. 이를 통해 도심 속에서도 자연과 교감할 수 있는 환경이 조성됩니다. 이 건축물은 도시 밀집도 문제를 해결할 수 있는 가능성을 제시하며, 미래 도시 생활에서 중요한 건축 트렌드로 자리잡을 것입니다. 슬라이딩 유리문과 나선형 계단은 실내외 경계를 허무는 핵심적인 역할을 합니다.
글로벌 트렌드 비교 및 인사이트
사르바스바 타워는 수직적 주거와 자연 통합을 강조하는 글로벌 건축 트렌드와 일치합니다. 기존 인도의 주거 건축과 비교했을 때, 자연과의 조화를 중시한 점이 두드러집니다. 스파즘 디자인은 도심 속에서 자연과 공존하는 가능성을 새롭게 제시하며, 이 건물이 향후 도시 건축의 방향성을 제시할 것이라 평가받습니다.
결론
사르바스바 타워는 붉은 테라코타 외관과 수직적 주거 개념을 결합하여 도심 속에서 자연과 교감할 수 있는 새로운 주거 모델을 제시합니다. 이를 통해 현대 도시 생활의 새로운 가능성을 보여주며, 자연 통합이 중요함을 강조합니다. 이러한 설계는 지속 가능한 미래 건축의 중요한 지표가 될 것입니다.
Write by ChatGPT & 5osa
A single family home is contained within the Sarvasva tower, which Indian studio Spasm Design created to stand out from the neighbouring grey buildings in Mumbai, India.
Named Sarvasva, the home is contained within a 12 storey tower that aims to make the most of its site within the dense urban setting.
Wrapped in a rainscreen of terracotta panels, the concrete framed tower has a distinctively coloured facade designed to stand out from the grey buildings that surround the site.
"The entire build is skinned in a rainscreen facade of terracotta panels, which are highly sustainable," studio co-founder Sangeeta Merchant told Dezeen.
"The colour works well with the green of the large acacia avenue the project stands on," she continued.
"Dust wont read on this self cleansing facade, and the colour stands out in the otherwise grey and boring vertical neighbourhood."
In response to the density of the urban site, the family home is spread across twelve levels intended to accommodate vertical living, which Spasm Design hopes will encourage a shift away from the common ways of building in the Indian capital.
"A single family vertical home in a dense urban setting is a tough proposition, considering most developments in Bombay are developer driven, with greed of floor space at their core," said studio co-founder Sanjeev Panjabi.
A geometric void made from intersecting rectangular cutouts stretches up one side of the tower, dotted with black spiral staircases and planting as well as outdoor spaces including balconies and terraces.
"We conceived a body that would propose a new way of living vertically, take in breezes, invite butterflies and birds and allow life to pour outdoors," Panjabi continued. "The vertical void lights up to lend a sense of green and atmosphere of naturalness to the neighbourhood."
"The outdoor spaces and little connections of black spiral stairs present a unique way of living the green void, which is an extension of the spaces within," he explained.
Inside, each interior space of the home is set back into the tower, flanked by jagged terraces of different shapes that run along the edges of the void.
Each terrace is bordered by black railings and dotted with greenery, while some levels are connected by external spiral staircases that add an additional black accent to the exterior.
Behind the front void, the interior spaces on each level are connected to the terraces by sliding glass doors and floor-to-ceiling windows.
Towards the bottom of the tower are a basement level as well as two levels of parking and service floors. The first main floor of the house above the parking levels is designed as a guest suite, with a number of guest bedrooms and bathrooms.
White walls feature throughout the spaces, accompanied by black accents as well as dark wooden finishes.
Above the guest rooms, the next levels of the tower contain the kitchen and family living space, while the next three floors contain bedrooms, including two principal bedrooms that each occupy a full floor and a children's room flanked by a playroom.
An extra floor filled with a double height formal living space is located above the bedrooms, finished with wooden wall panels and modern furnishings. The living space is overlooked by a mezzanine-level dining room.
Near the top of the tower, one terrace holds a swimming pool lined with tiles of varying green tones. Lounge spaces sit behind the pool, which can be opened or closed to the space outside by white floor-length curtains and sliding glass doors.
Designed to act as a casual living space, the lounge area features a small kitchen with pale blue cupboards and polished black flooring, as well as a living area with orange armchairs that mimic the colour of the facade.
Above the swimming pool, an additional level containing a gym is set back within the tower, contained within a black volume with floor-to-ceiling windows.
A split level roof terrace tops the tower, comprising three staggered levels connected by an additional black spiral staircase. Coated in dark grey floor tiles, the main terrace space features areas of planting and open space for relaxation.
from dezeen