Source: Bearth & Deplazes
Photography: Ralph Feiner, Malans
Williman-Lötscher House, Sevgein, 1998
A house with lots of different rooms – a kind of “labyrinthine mousehole” – was what this family of four wanted. The result is a tower-like arrangement of rooms offset at each half-storey and following the slope of the land. Situated in a small woodland clearing on the edge of the village of Sevgein, the house fits like a wedge between a mountainside and the end of a chain of hills, forming a gentle transition between the two. From this position if affords a view right across the wide valley of the Upper Rhine. The two rooms on each floor are arranged along the shared long wall in such way as to create a vertical spiral of space within the house, or kind of “inner topography”. This has the effect of maximising the interior volume, despite the small size of the individual rooms. The entrance to the house opens into a two-storey hallway with steps leading down to the dining room and kitchen, and up to a living room with gallery. Four more rooms are on the storeys above. The house’s timber frame was prefabricated in sections and standard windows, such as used for pitched roofs, were pre-fitted on both façades and roof. The client did much of the finishing work himself, e.g. timber cladding paintwork.
Year of Construction:
1998
Architecture:
Bearth & Deplazes Architekten, Chur / Zürich
Valentin Bearth – Andrea Deplazes – Daniel Ladner
Project Manager:
Bettina Werner / Tamara Bonzi
Civil Engineer Beton:
Jürg Buchli, Haldenstein
Civil Engineer Wood:
Holzforum, Ostermundigen
Timber Frame Engineer:
Holzbaubüro Reusser, Winterthur
Building Physics:
Toscano AG, Chur
Sanitary and Heating Engineer:
Pius Monn, Ilanz
Electrical Engineer:
Vinzens AG, Ilanz
Esta entrada aparece primero en HIC Arquitectura http://hicarquitectura.com/2018/02/bearth-deplazes-williman-lotscher-house/
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