Tranquille House / Limdim House Studio
In Asian culture, filial piety is a beautiful custom. This project is such an example of it. The Tranquille house was built by the children for their parents to enjoy old age and gardening.
In Asian culture, filial piety is a beautiful custom. This project is such an example of it. The Tranquille house was built by the children for their parents to enjoy old age and gardening.
This two-storey split level house was approved under CDC controls on a moderately busy suburban street. A discreet façade is presented to the street, with north facing internal courtyard.
The WERK restaurant, occupying a large portion of the ground floor and extending into the exterior, has become an important meeting place and a vital element of the building and its surrounding area.
Villa of The Star, a “renovation” project as a part of the Mo Stay project, is built on three main factors: Connectivity – Locality – Sustainability.
Cantilevered planes and projected volumes fulfill the demand for a sense of openness within the enclosure. Brick and concrete are exposed on the elevation to emphasize the character of the house.
By blending the core Danish design principles of simplicity, functionality, and restraint, with touches of Ontario rural vernacular, this project is a contemporary interpretation of the traditional Danish Sommerhus that is rooted in both its local context and the clients’ family history.
The homeowners had a unique agenda for what they wanted in their new home. They had been living in an ornate, immaculately decorated 18th century historic mansion on a large 40 acre property in Mansfield, MA.
The house for a Gemini had to become two. Split in half and clad in grey, it houses two houses in one, one public and one private with a sliding partition in-between.