Craving not just a home but a proper piece of architecture, a handful of design- and business-savvy Dutch families banded together, hired an architect, and set about forming the community that would net them the houses of their dreams.
Seen here from the south, Villa van Vijven’s orange facade is meant to mimic the tiled rooftops of Holland’s country buildings, while the building’s horizontal pull echoes the flat landscape. The second-floor living rooms look out on the 4,200-square-foot communal garden, one of only two shared spaces in the whole community. Bob Krone, Koos Sweringa, and Marianne Schram stroll the grounds.
With the idea of communal living all too prone to conjure visions of student squalor or hippy homeliness, Villa van Vijven comes as a refreshing surprise. The strikingly sculptural bright orange building, reclining in the flat Dutch landscape, accommodates five families under a single, stylish roof. And there’s not a whiff of carob in the air.
Step into any one of its five apartments and you are convinced that you've entered an independent piece of architecture entirely. Though they vary in size (the largest is 3,200 square feet), each unit has a panoramic view of the surrounding landscape and its own distinctive layout, decor, and, of course, inhabitants. The group ranges from a business manager to a sports coach to an art historian. “We don’t necessarily see each other every day,” says Paula van Dijk (the art historian). “Often, we just say hello when leaving or coming home again.” Cees Noordhoek, a sales manager who lives here with his wife, Jacquelien, and three kids, adds: “It just doesn’t really feel like communal living.”
Yet
Villa van Vijven is a truly collective and collaborative project,
financed and commissioned by five families (19 people in total) who
wanted to build a home that they could otherwise never afford: an
architecturally high-impact retreat set in extensive gardens, with great
views of the surrounding landscape and nearby lake. Residents Johan
Bouwmeester and Marlene Blokhuis got the ball rolling when they found
the large plot to the southwest of the new and rapidly growing city of
Almere, an hour from Amsterdam. The appeal of the relatively rural
setting, just 10 minutes from the center of the city, was manifest, and
the couple began inviting design-minded acquaintances to join in on the
project.
The
next step was to find the right architect, one able to embrace the kind
of co-creation process that the group needed to accommodate their five
different dream homes under one roof. “Our first architect bullied us,”
Noordhoek recalls. “But then someone told us about this promising young
office, Next Architects. So we did two workshops with them and found
that they were able to focus our rambling thoughts. That was enough to
convince us.”
With the architect on board, the business of obtaining financing, permits, and other essential administration was handled, Noordhoek says, “in the same way we organized all details—by mandate. For every part of the process we appointed two managers, who did the field research, asked for competitive bids from suppliers, and had the power to act on behalf of the group. The group as a whole was presented with a detailed proposal for a ‘yes’ or ‘no’ vote. We felt that discussions and emotions shouldn’t be allowed to run loose. We knew that only when we acted like professional managers would it be possible to build the house on schedule and within budget.”
The
same tough principles were applied to the design process. “Difficulties
mainly arose when individual preferences collided with another person’s
interests,” Noordhoek says. “But in every case of conflicting
preferences, we simply let the architect make the decision. Usually,
that worked.”
“It
was very different from having one client,” says architect Michel
Schreinemachers of Next Architects. “With a group, you have another
dynamic entirely.
Yet
it worked quite nicely.” At many steps along the way Schreinemachers
would propose several options, which the group would discuss and then
return with feedback. The final decision, though, was always the
architect’s. “If I’d suggested the eventual building at the outset, they
would have walked away,” he adds. “They wanted something very
industrial, or thought they did. But they always wanted something
architecturally interesting, a landmark building, and this design grew
out of our discussions.”
Schreinemachers
visualized the space as a block of rectangles that he rotated to face
different directions, adding and subtracting volumes to reflect the
residents’ wishes. The result is a Tetris-like layering of interlocking
shapes, each with its own character and its own signifying color as
visualized in the plans. “When Michel finished his drawings, everyone
had to choose the unit they wanted—it was the moment of truth!”
Noordhoek says. “And each of the five groups went for a different one,
which shows how well the architect interpreted our wishes.”
Personal wishes could often be indulged, given that the truly communal areas of the project are just the large garden (each family also has a small private garden as well) and what Schreinemachers calls “the public square” onto which all the front doors open: a glowing orange space carved out underneath the building, where the residents tend to leave their bicycles and bump into each other on the way in or out. This feature, van Dijk says, “gives the building a really playful quality, as does its great openness to the garden.” Schreinemachers reports that he achieved it “by raising the living room up to the second floor. You can walk straight into the garden from the living rooms, over the terrace.”
Schreinmachers chose orange for the exterior to reference the traditional orange-tiled rooftops of Dutch country buildings. Echoing the splashy chromatics of the outside, the residents quickly set about brightly painting their own interiors. In Paula van Dijk and Bob Krone’s minimal white space, for example, there’s a vivid splash of yellow, while Koos Sweringa, seeking a bit of formal instruction, attended a color course that inspired a whole palette of shades.
Color aside, the actual interior design was left to the residents themselves—to keep costs down they moved into bare spaces. Undaunted by empty expanses of naked walls and flooring, each family created an interior that satisfies their individual desires and shows a strong sense of ownership. Noordhoek (who took the green unit) sought ample floor space for his large family, and thus his unit is a generous 3,200 square feet. Bob Krone and Paula van Dijk (who took the red apartment) wanted “big, open spaces with long walls for hanging paintings and as few doors as possible.” Koos Sweringa and Marianne Schram (whose two college-age daughters usually stay at the yellow apartment with them on weekends) wanted a “live-in” kitchen that resides in the place of honor that the other families have assigned to the living room. They also have a capsule kitchen next to their bedroom on the second floor, plus a view of the historic tower of Naarden from the same room.
Though
the architecture favors idiosyncrasy over uniformity, when it comes to
each other, the residents are all quick to note that pragmatism is what
they value most. They are unanimously keen to emphasize that they are
best neighbors, not best friends. Thus, they maintain a fund for the
upkeep of the house and are working on the idea of a shared amphitheater
with a fireplace for the garden. But house meetings are kept to a
minimum—far fewer than the twice-monthly gatherings demanded by the
five-year development process. “The biggest advantage of living together
is that we can use each other’s expertise,” Krone says. “Another
advantage is that when you’re on vacation, there’s someone to pick up
the mail, water the plants, and feed the pets.”
Even
while enjoying all these advantages, “I think we all still wonder what
on earth it was that made us go for this unusual design,” Noordhoek
says, as he strolls through the garden. “But it just stands out in every
respect,” he adds, turning to look at the villa. “It surprises me every
day that we dared to do it. It really is the building of our dreams.”
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