Architects: nArchitects
Location: Ordos, Inner Mongolia, China
Project team: Eric Bunge, Mimi Hoang; Dominique Gonfard, Hubert Pelletier, Alice Wong (Project Manager), Adam Vana
Engineers: Ove Arup NY; MEP (Mahadev Raman), Structures (Markus Schulte, Thomas Claassen)
Design year: 2008
Construction year: 2009
Curator: Ai Weiwei, Beijing, China
Client: Jiang Yuan Water Engineering Ltd, Inner Mongolia, China
Constructed Area: 1,000 sqm
Conceived as an Inner House within an Outer House, our villa combines two distinct spatial and thermal conditions. The Inner House is designed as a compact, essential house, containing 60% of the project’s total volume and 75% of its area. Outer House provides a protective enclosure, and a unique series of interconnected, voluminous, sky-lit spaces. This layered strategy responds to the extreme swings of the Ordos desert climate with efficiencies in climatic and material strategies. At the same time, Villa-Villa provides its inhabitants with a variety of modes of living, as they occupy a house that expands and contracts according to the seasons.
diagrams
Inner House: In this domestic core, three single-storey volumes stack on top of each other, resulting in a series of terraces on the roofs of the volumes below. Each Inner House floor is optimized in its shape, orientation and organization for particular patterns of living. The first floor privileges connections to the landscape and the spaces of the Outer House. Experienced in the round, the second floor’s open configuration connects views to the outside across a continuous living space. Functions are positioned according to solar exposure, with the kitchen and breakfast area on the Eeast, the dining room sheltered from the western sun on the South, and the living room with views of the sunset on the West. Iin the sleeping quarters on the 3rd floor, four bedroom suites face different directions, each with a window on one of the four facades. The roof is designed as a fourth floor, stacked upon the volumes below, and optimized in shape and orientation to house a photovoltaic array.
Outer House: Gardens are incorporated into the diverse spaces and terraces of the Outer House, rather than exposed to the extreme climate and high rate of evaporation of Ordos. The material, light and spatial qualities of these intermediate outdoor-like spaces contrast dramatically with those of the Inner House. While warm woods, stone, glass and plaster line its carefully finished rooms, the materials of the Outer House are rougher: brick floor, painted brick walls on the interior, and an exterior surfaced in various brick textures. The single height stacked floors of the Inner House connect to the landscape horizontally through large window openings. In contrast, the spaces of the Outer House are varied in height, largely opaque, and illuminated by skylights. These opposing atmospheres create a constant fluctuation between inside and outside, side and top light, texture and abstraction.
Climate: Villa - Vvilla expands and contracts with shifting use and changing temperatures. In order to conserve energy, its inhabitants can choose to live mostly in the compact Inner House during the winter. This heated and conditioned zone is protected with 60mm of batt insulation, while the Outer House is in turn wrapped with 120mm of rigid insulation, and heated mostly by passive means. Our engineers project that this approach will maintain temperatures in the Outer House at a ~30% differential between the Inner House and the outdoors. Inhabitants can choose to further warm this intermediate space with radiant heating provided in the first floor slab, or by simply opening the single glazed sliding doors separating it from the Inner House. During the rest of the year, domestic activity can cross this thermal threshold, flowing from interior to outdoor-like interior and on to the outdoors.
Location: Ordos, Inner Mongolia, China
Project team: Eric Bunge, Mimi Hoang; Dominique Gonfard, Hubert Pelletier, Alice Wong (Project Manager), Adam Vana
Engineers: Ove Arup NY; MEP (Mahadev Raman), Structures (Markus Schulte, Thomas Claassen)
Design year: 2008
Construction year: 2009
Curator: Ai Weiwei, Beijing, China
Client: Jiang Yuan Water Engineering Ltd, Inner Mongolia, China
Constructed Area: 1,000 sqm
Conceived as an Inner House within an Outer House, our villa combines two distinct spatial and thermal conditions. The Inner House is designed as a compact, essential house, containing 60% of the project’s total volume and 75% of its area. Outer House provides a protective enclosure, and a unique series of interconnected, voluminous, sky-lit spaces. This layered strategy responds to the extreme swings of the Ordos desert climate with efficiencies in climatic and material strategies. At the same time, Villa-Villa provides its inhabitants with a variety of modes of living, as they occupy a house that expands and contracts according to the seasons.
diagrams
Inner House: In this domestic core, three single-storey volumes stack on top of each other, resulting in a series of terraces on the roofs of the volumes below. Each Inner House floor is optimized in its shape, orientation and organization for particular patterns of living. The first floor privileges connections to the landscape and the spaces of the Outer House. Experienced in the round, the second floor’s open configuration connects views to the outside across a continuous living space. Functions are positioned according to solar exposure, with the kitchen and breakfast area on the Eeast, the dining room sheltered from the western sun on the South, and the living room with views of the sunset on the West. Iin the sleeping quarters on the 3rd floor, four bedroom suites face different directions, each with a window on one of the four facades. The roof is designed as a fourth floor, stacked upon the volumes below, and optimized in shape and orientation to house a photovoltaic array.
Outer House: Gardens are incorporated into the diverse spaces and terraces of the Outer House, rather than exposed to the extreme climate and high rate of evaporation of Ordos. The material, light and spatial qualities of these intermediate outdoor-like spaces contrast dramatically with those of the Inner House. While warm woods, stone, glass and plaster line its carefully finished rooms, the materials of the Outer House are rougher: brick floor, painted brick walls on the interior, and an exterior surfaced in various brick textures. The single height stacked floors of the Inner House connect to the landscape horizontally through large window openings. In contrast, the spaces of the Outer House are varied in height, largely opaque, and illuminated by skylights. These opposing atmospheres create a constant fluctuation between inside and outside, side and top light, texture and abstraction.
Climate: Villa - Vvilla expands and contracts with shifting use and changing temperatures. In order to conserve energy, its inhabitants can choose to live mostly in the compact Inner House during the winter. This heated and conditioned zone is protected with 60mm of batt insulation, while the Outer House is in turn wrapped with 120mm of rigid insulation, and heated mostly by passive means. Our engineers project that this approach will maintain temperatures in the Outer House at a ~30% differential between the Inner House and the outdoors. Inhabitants can choose to further warm this intermediate space with radiant heating provided in the first floor slab, or by simply opening the single glazed sliding doors separating it from the Inner House. During the rest of the year, domestic activity can cross this thermal threshold, flowing from interior to outdoor-like interior and on to the outdoors.
'REF. > Architecture' 카테고리의 다른 글
[ Pezo von Ellrichshausen Arquitectos ] asa Parr (0) | 2008.12.24 |
---|---|
[ Moarqs ] CCDH office (0) | 2008.12.24 |
[ group8 ] Red houses (0) | 2008.12.23 |
[ LOT-EK ] PUMA City, Shipping Container Store (0) | 2008.12.23 |
[ Spacelab Architects ] Food Container Remixed (0) | 2008.12.23 |