Friday, 29 May 2009

Sherman Residence - Lorcan O’Herlihy Architects

The house sits on a south facing hillside on a ridge overlooking the upper Tamalpais Valley and San Francisco Bay beyond. The complexities found in the natural landscape and topography of Mill Valley, with its spiraling movement of folded planes and steep hillsides, established dynamic conditions critical to the direction of the overall architectural solution.

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors
Complexity came in the tethering of the house to the hill. The primary level, which houses the main public spaces, is visually anchored to the site as it bends in plan along natural contour lines. Simultaneously, the house cantilevers over the precipitous incline, its main floor supported by horizontal steel beams. The beams attach to the rear house wall, reinforced for additional strength.

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

In the rear, the house stands on steel columns with diagonal bracing embedded in concrete foundation beams. A composition of floating rain screen wood skin and smooth troweled plaster are innovatively used on the exterior skin to further articulate the geologic conditions of the surrounding valley.

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

The upper volume folds in section and in plan creating a dynamic dialogue with the main level. This level houses the glass walled master bedroom suite that has panoramic views of the San Francisco Bay.

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architects: LOHA Architects
Location: Mill Valley, California, USA
Principal in Charge: Lorcan O’Herlihy
Project Manager: Kuo-Huei Tsai
Project Team: Michael Poirier, Juan Diego Gerscovich, Su Yingzi
Structural Engineer: Paul Francheschi
Client: Tony and Rachel Sherman
Project year: 2005
Constructed Area: 386 sqm
Photographs: LOHA


Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Playa la Isla house - Juan Carlos Doblado

The house is located on the seafront, overlooking the islands of Asia (Peru).

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

The project aims to demonstrate the connection between an abstract architecture and its surroundings, establishing a relationship between man and nature, between the desert and the sea. The desert generates the need to create a private area in the vastness of its territory; the ocean invites to open their horizons.

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

The logic used in the design of this house is subtractive. The consignment was seized with the maximum constructible area through a rigorous geometric solid volume, which was then drilled generating a sunken courtyard. The terrace roof is a front overhang with the same proportion of the gap in the courtyard, a “displacement” of the horizontal plane of the roof.

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Thus, establishing a vertical relationship with the sky and another horizontal with the sea. This is achieved at a dialectical relationship between architectural enclosure and openness, transparency and opacity, privacy and exterior.

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors
Location: Playa La Isla, Asia, Cañete, Peru
Structural Engineer: Pedro Moscoso
Electrical Engineer: Abelardo Grados
Sanitary Engineer: Gonzalo HerreraSite area: 209 sqmConstructed Area: 258 sqmProject year: 2007Construction year: 2007Photography: Elsa Ramírez

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Thursday, 28 May 2009

Kenig Residence - Slade Architecture

We renovated this entire brownstone, completed in 2007 for NYC pillar and father of three daughters, Ricky Kenig, the owner and personality behind the Ricky’s NYC stores. Ricky was interested in creating a modern heaven for his family, in a beautiful Brooklyn brownstone: a place that offered private retreat spaces as well as open mixing spaces to spend time together.

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

The program of spaces was organized by floor. The basement was finished to become a casual family den-type room with a pool table and couches, etc. The ground floor level was opened up to become a loft-like living room and kitchen with an exterior wood deck floating outside, over the backyard. The second floor became the girls’ floor with bedrooms, a study, kid-lounge and bath. Bachelor retreat was the idea of the third and top floor, with a home office, bedroom and bath.

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Tying the home together, the stair acts as a spine from basement to third floor. We were interested in allowing this to read as a distinct element and so structured it to rise free of the adjacent walls. A new skylight was inserted into the roof, above the stair, accentuating the vertical rise and bringing natural light down into the home.

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

The wall behind the stair was finished with sheets of blackened steel that run continuously from the parlor level to the roof. Display elements can be easily affixed to the wall using magnets. By creating an entirely flexible “canvas of metal” we offered a space with infinite possibilities for visuals. The flexibility of the magnet wall fosters the creation of zones organically, as people affix items of interest to them at their own floor-alternately the entire stair could be rigorously curated. We felt that the flexibility of the display wall mechanism was appropriate particularly for a family so rooted in a retail tradition.

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

In the kitchen, the color palette is focused on black and silver. Countertops are Absolute Black granite with a laminate on upper cabinets and island that features an abstract aluminum pattern on a black background. Mid level cabinets and security doors are aluminum sheet, with a custom pattern of circles and ovals that creates an optical illusion that the sheet is bowed out when in fact it is entirely flat. The pattern was designed by Slade Architecture and water jet cut into the panel.

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors
The girls’ floor offers real flexibility as the rooms can be opened or closed with large sliding doors. In the open configuration, the entire floor is open-like a loft space. By closing the doors, the girls can create a traditional closed bedroom space. The bathroom on this floor has a playful tile combination that mixes graphic tiles of a grass lawn with green glass cobbletones tiles.

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

At the top floor, we designed a retreat for Ricky. There is a home office and extensive closet/dressing area as well as bedroom and bathroom. An extensive collection of rare shoes is featured prominently immediately adjacent to the stair entry on the floor, below the skylight. We felt that it was such a committed interest that the collection should receive a preferential place in this private zone. The “shoe wall” as we called it became an important personal expression as well as a unique decorative element.

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architects: Slade Architecture
Location: Brooklyn, New York, USA
Client: Ricky Kenig
Project Year: 2007
Photographs: Jordi Miralles

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors

Architecture, Design, House, Interiors