Housing Block Bagebi

Housing Block Bagebi
© Angus Leadley Brown

HOUSING BLOCK BAGEBI

Wunderwerk + DM Studio

ARCHITECTS
DM Studio, Wunderwerk

LEAD ARCHITECTS
Gigi Shukakidze, George Beriashvili, David Makharoblishvili

MANUFACTURERS
MBG Group

PHOTOGRAPHS
Angus Leadley Brown, Giorgi Dadiani, Tako Robakidze

AREA
6200 m²

YEAR
2020

LOCATION
Tiflis, Georgia

CATEGORY
Residential

Text description provided by architect.

The building is located on the Tbilisi-Tskneti highway, next to the former student campus. The project brief was to create a building consisting of 35 residential units, though the client’s desire was not solely focused on the commercialization and selling of the apartments.

Housing Block Bagebi
© Angus Leadley Brown
Housing Block Bagebi
© Angus Leadley Brown

Due to the location of this building, which is adjacent to a forested area, there was a need to create a building that reflected a spacious, healthy living environment, unlike the tight constructions surrounding it.

During the location analysis, we researched important Soviet-era buildings nearby, including the student campus complex of Maghlivi University, where refugees from Abkhazia have been housed for decades.

Housing Block Bagebi
© Angus Leadley Brown
Housing Block Bagebi
© Angus Leadley Brown
Housing Block Bagebi
© Tako Robakidze

Generally, our observation focused on the process of living in abandoned and unfinished buildings and how existing structures become dependent on the different forms of life. The intuitive connection and predominant reference while developing the forms of the building was the notion of a completely bare frame, which contained various ways of fulfilling itself.

In general, the form goes through many stages of criticism and often returns to the original intuitive image or archetype, yet with more sophisticated composition. In our case, we arrived again at the phenomenon of the bare frame.

Housing Block Bagebi
© Angus Leadley Brown
Housing Block Bagebi
© Angus Leadley Brown

The horizontal and vertical elements of the facade are as functional as possible and have both a basic structural and engineering-sanitary role. At their expense, the living spaces offer more freedom and are easier to customize. 

This allowed us to avoid excessive costs and omit materials, which tend to be expensive when creating the expressiveness of a building. Here, in each apartment, remains only a simple dividing line between the inner and outer realms.

Housing Block Bagebi
© Angus Leadley Brown
Housing Block Bagebi
© Giorgi Dadiani

Due to the difficult terrain, the building has entrances to three different levels. There are sports and recreational spaces for children on the ground floor; a two-story underground car park and a garden planted with various plants, which was initiated by the client due to the necessity of filling the existing ravine. There are also swimming pools on the green roof verandas of the building.

Critical building content is important in addition to providing functionality to the client and residents. How can some methods, with the exemption of unnecessary formation, make a person feel free to use a building?

Housing Block Bagebi
© Giorgi Dadiani
Housing Block Bagebi
© Giorgi Dadiani
Housing Block Bagebi
© Giorgi Dadiani

As the inner life of the inhabitants of the neighborhood is constantly changing, the facade’s net structure as the equalizer of this makes the process more contrasting to the observer.


Housing Block Bagebi
Typical Floor Plan


Housing Block Bagebi
Diagram
Housing Block Bagebi
Diagram


Housing Block Bagebi
Site Plan