Night Sky House / Peter Stutchbury Architecture
o try to summarise this house is virtually impossible. Walking into the space for the first time is difficult to describe. It feels ancient and modern at the same time.
o try to summarise this house is virtually impossible. Walking into the space for the first time is difficult to describe. It feels ancient and modern at the same time.
Transforming a bare attic in the centre of Innsbruck into a home ready to welcome the many stories of a traveller: this was the aim of the latest commission undertaken by NOA.
Set within a clifftop on South Korea’s eastern peninsula, Seosaeng House marries London-based Studio Weave’s imaginative architecture with Korean tradition in a multi-generational family home stepped to become one with the hillside.
The Swiss house is in central Israel in a vibrant residential neighborhood, with 300 m2 of floor space, covering a 500 m2 plot. The concept of the house, in line with the credo of Israelevitz Architects, is hiding more than it reveals.
Magnolia House is an alternative response to the common housing enclave. It seeks to understand it from the perspective of a series of spaces that are inhabited by a family, rather than from the perspective of an architectural element.
Casa Paakal is a historic house dating from the beginning of the 20th century. It is located in one of the most important streets of the city of Mérida, Mexico and in one of its oldest neighborhoods, Santiago.
This house sits on a rocky, sloping, waterfront site in Westport Island, ME. It has four bedrooms, with a large open living and dining area to allow for gatherings of the architect’s family and friends.
“HillHaus,” an extraordinary project nestled in the heart of Houston Hill Country, Damascus Design Build, is thrilled to share the remarkable story of this architectural triumph.
Our project takes advantage of this context to create the initial premises of the project, the materials were carefully chosen; freijó wood veneer for the joinery, doors and panels, exposed natural concrete from the original structure of the building
The dominant design idea of architect Bastian Bechtloff is based on the principle of American residential skyscrapers, whose open-plan layouts allow one room to merge seamlessly into another.
This old house is considered a nostalgic piece of history by its owners, serving as a reminder of how their journey began. Following a period of relocation abroad, the family returned to Israel and searched for their dream home – surprisingly, this turned out to be their old house.
At Rau Haus, a 6.24kW PV array provides the home with 9,777 kWh of renewable energy a year, and two Heliodyne solar panels serve a 119-gallon storage tank. The home is equipped with all electric indoor appliances and an electric heat-pump HVAC system